2
December 2004![]()
Headline
story. Secretary General pays visits to Lao
PDR, Australia. In the course of his late November travels, which
have included the IUCN World Conservation Congress in Thailand
and a visit to a Ramsar/Evian project in Cambodia,
the Secretary General, Peter Bridgewater, has also been able to stop in to discuss
accession progress in the Lao People's Democratic Republic and to discuss scenarios
of the Convention's future development with the members of Australia's Wetlands
and Waterbirds Taskforce. Here are very brief illustrated reports
on both of those events: Lao PDR,
Australia. [02/12/04]
Headline
story. Samoa joins the Ramsar Convention.
The Secretariat is extremely pleased to announce that UNESCO, the treaty depositary,
has received the instrument of accession from Samoa,
and the Convention, as amended by the Paris Protocol (1982) and the Regina Amendments
(1987), will enter into force for Samoa, as our 142nd Contracting Party, on
6 February 2005. The first Wetland of International Importance designated by
Samoa is the "Lake Lanoto'o",
the largest freshwater lake in the country amongst few remaining still in pristine
natural form. It is located in the central highlands of the Island of Upolu
and forms the core part of the watershed area for the township of Apia, the
capital of Samoa. The site apparently comprises two other small lakes as well,
rainforests of native hardwood tree species and secondary forests of shrubs
and other vegetation, but Ramsar datasheets on the site have not yet been received,
and more information will follow later. Ramsar's Assistant Advisor for Asia-Pacific,
Ms
Liazzat
Rabbiosi, notes that the Secretariat would particularly like to acknowledge
the support offered by Bill Phillips (Mainstream) and
the WWF Global Freshwater Programme, whose
assistance has been extremely helpful in moving the accession process forward.
Mr Vainuupo Jungblut, the Ramsar Officer
in the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Program (SPREP) in Apia,
adds: "A big Congratulations to Faumuina Pati LIU and his staff
at the Samoa Division of Environment & Conservation of the Ministry of Natural
Resources & Environment for their hard work and effort." Samoa joins
Papua New Guinea, Palau, and (newly) the Marshall Islands (with Australia and
New Zealand) in carrying the objectives of the Ramsar Convention forward in
the Pacific Islands region. [01/12/04]
Vacancy
announcement. IWMI seeks a Capacity Building Officer.
Kamani Rajanayake, Personnel Officer,
International Water Management Institute, writes: "We are pleased
to share with you the attached position announcement for the post of Capacity
Building Officer in the Challenge Program on Water and Food (CPWF) based
at the CPWF Secretariat, located at IWMI, Colombo, Sri Lanka or with one of
the partner institutions of the CPWF. This is an international staff position
and will be on two-year, fixed-term, renewable appointment. Applications with
details of qualifications, experience, list of publications, and the names and
addresses of three referees, should be submitted to the Human Resources office,
IWMI, P.O. Box 2075, Colombo, Sri Lanka. Email: work-at-iwmi@cgiar.org on or
before 31 January 2005. For information
about the CPWF visit http://www.waterforfood.org
and for information about IWMI visit http://www.iwmi.org."
Here is the position description in PDF format. [link
later removed] [01/12/04]
Who's
where?
Tobias
Salathé, Senior Advisor for Europe, en route to the European regional
meeting in Yerevan, has stopped off in Strasbourg,
France, 30 November - 1 December 2004, for a meeting of the Standing
Committee of the Bern Convention, which will be dealing with, among
other matters, a number of issues affecting Ramsar sites in Europe. [30/11/04]
Lei
Guangchun, Senior Advisor for Asia, is in Kushiro,
Japan, 28 November to 3 December 2004, to participate in the UNITAR
workshop for the Asia Pacific region on Wetlands, Water and Biodiversity,
as a guest of UNITAR. [29/11/04]
Abou
Bamba, Senior Advisor for Africa, and Ahmed El-Sabban, Assistant
Advisor, are in Montpellier, France, 29
November to 4 December 2004, for the workshop "Préparation des dispositifs
de formation des gestionnaires de zones humides de 5 pays d'Afrique francophone"
hosted by ATEN (the Atelier Technique des Espaces Naturelles).
[29/11/04]
Yesterday's News!
![]()
Ramsar's
NGO partners re-affirm their hopes and commitments. The four most
senior officers of Ramsar's International Organization Partners met on Friday
in Bangkok, during the 3rd IUCN World Conservation Congress, to reiterate their
support to the Ramsar Convention. During a brief meeting, Achim Steiner,
Director General of IUCN - The World Conservation Union; Claude Martin,
Director General of the World Wildlife Fund - WWF; Mike Rands, Director
and Chief Executive of BirdLife International; and Jane Madgwick, Director
General of Wetlands International, signed the new Memoranda of Understanding
with Peter Bridgewater, Secretary General of the Ramsar Convention. More
here, with pix. [30/11/04]
New
Intern for Europe chosen for Ramsar Secretariat. The Secretariat
is pleased to announce that Dorothea August from
Germany has been selected as the next Intern/Assistant Advisor for Europe, replacing
Estelle Gironnet from France (well,
that's a "hard act to follow").
Dorothea graduated as an Engineer in Land-use Planning, landscape conservation,
nature protection and environmental development from the University of Hanover,
Germany. Her dissertation subject was the conservation status of the European
Mink, a species that is found in wetland habitats. Growing up in Eastern Germany,
Dorothea was aware of wetland degradation in her home region, and this inspired
her to strive for a career in the field of nature protection. The
Ramsar Secretariat looks forward to welcoming Dorothea in February 2005 and
laments with gnashing of teeth our Estelle's 'graduation' from the Bureau at
about the same time. [30/11/04]
Tunisia
plans 15 new Ramsar sites. Denis Landenbergue (WWF) reports that
"the Tunisian Government has just officially announced its commitment to
designate at least 15 new Ramsar Sites, covering a total area of over 750,000
hectares. The announcement was made as a result of a project supported by WWF's
Global Freshwater Programme, and implemented in the framework of a close cooperation
between WWF's Mediterreanean Programme Office and Tunis Project Office, the
Direction Générale des Forêts of Tunisia, the Institut National
Agron
omique
of University of Tunis, and non-governmental organisations including the Association
des Amis des Oiseaux (AAO) - Birdlife National Partner in Tunisia. Mr. Mike
Smart, former Ramsar Deputy Secretary General and a recognized specialist
of Tunisia's wetlands, has also been providing valuable expertise and support
to this commendable initiative of the Government of Tunisia. The official announcement
was made by Mr. Amol El Abed, Tunisia's Secretary of State for Water
Resources and Fisheries (Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources) as part
of his Opening Speech for the eleventh Pan-African Ornithological Congress (PAOC
XI) currently taking place in Djerba, Tunisia (21th-25th November 2004)."
See also, http://www.panda.org/about_wwf/what_we_do/freshwater/news/news.cfm?uNewsID=16731.
[30/11/04]
Sad
news.
Passing of Tom Kabii, WWF and former Ramsar colleague.
The staff of the Ramsar Secretariat are deeply saddened by the news of the death
of our friend and colleague Tom Kabii in a road accident in Kenya. Here is a
brief message from Dr. Yaa Ntiamoa-Baidu, Director, Africa and Madagascar
Programme, WWF International. "Dear Friends and Colleagues, It is with
deep sorrow that I announce the death of my dear friend and colleague, Tom Kabii.
Tom was driving himself yesterday, Sunday, to the Mara for the EARPO Policy
workshop which was due to start this morning. . . . I have known Tom since 1996
when he worked for the Ramsar Secretariat. He was a most pleasant and caring
person and we became good friends. He left Ramsar to go and do his PhD in Australia,
and two years ago when he finished his PhD, I persuaded him to come and work
for WWF in Kenya. He readily agreed, saying, 'nature conservation is where my
heart is and to be able to do something for my own country is a most welcome
opportunity'. Tom has lost his life while serving a cause he really believed
in. The Africa and Madagascar Programme has lost a most committed, dedicated,
enthusiastic and great advocate for conservation. May his soul rest in perfect
peace." [29/11/04]
Now
available. More on the Merida regional
meeting, and pix. Following the first tangible results of Ramsar
Panamerican regional meeting earlier this month, the draft "Merida Message"
(see below), Iván Valencia has prepared a brief report and a slender
list of photographs of some of the participants and the Red Mangroves of the
recently designated Ramsar Site "Reserva de la Biosfera Ría Celestún".
![]()
Conference
on transboundary Ramsar sites. Many Wetlands of International Importance
are located in border zones of adjoining countries. Despite their obvious transboundary
connectivity, these shared wetlands are often not perceived and treated as ecological
and hydrological units. This poses major challenges to wetland conservation,
not only in terms of habitat management, regional planning and decision making.
In order to explore these issues, an international conference was held in mid-November
2004 in Illmitz, Austria, in the Austrian-Hungarian transboundary park and Ramsar
site Neusiedl/Fertö, where some 50 participants from all over Europe gathered
to bring further clarity to the emerging issue of transboundary Ramsar management
- an ideal preparation for the workshop on "shared catchments and wetlands
- increasing transboundary cooperation" to be held as part of the European
Ramsar Meeting in Yerevan, Armenia, on 5 December 2004. Ramsar's Tobias Salathé
reports on the conference and includes the official meeting summary and a number
of interesting photographs of the venue and participants, right
here. [27/11/04]
Austria
names peatland areas in Styria. The Ramsar Secretariat is delighted
to announce that Austria, just a few months after having designated a number
of valuable mires in the Salzburg region, has named, as of 15 October
2004, a small collection of bogs, mires and fens in the Steiermark region in
the southeast. The Moore am Nassköhr
site (211 hectares, 47°43'N 15°33'E), already a Nature Reserve, comprises
a number of mires that are all near-natural except for one bog, the Torfstichmoor,
which had been used as a peat cut in the 19th century; the others, however,
have been more or less affected by cattle grazing and trampling. In a joint
project with the landowners, the Austrian Federal Forests (ÖBf-AG), the
Institute of Ecology and Conservation Biology of Vienna University (IECB), and
WWF-Austria initiated a management plan financed by the ÖBf-AG in order
to improve the conditions for the peatlands. This is an outstanding example
of private nature conservation activities in Austria. In spring 2002 the ÖBf-AG
built dams into all drainage channels and in autumn - after long-lasting negotiations
with the farmers - they began building a fence to keep the cattle out from most
of the mires. A brief description
of the site, with some photos of both the site and the presentation of Ramsar
site certificates by the Austrian Ramsar National Committee, can be seen here.
[26/11/04] ![]()
Ramsar
Asia meeting set for India, February 2005. The Ramsar Secretariat
is pleased to announce that the Ministry of Environment and Forests of India
has offered to host the Ramsar COP9 Preparatory Regional
Meeting for Asia (including Western, Central, Southern and Eastern
Asia) in Bhubaneswar, India, from 9 to 12 February
2005, which will follow immediately after the
Asian Wetland Symposium 2005 (AWS). This meeting should provide
opportunities for wider participation of governmental officials, NGOs, academia
and civil society members in both AWS and the Ramsar Asian Regional Meeting.
The Government of India has set a common organising committee for both events,
and official invitations will be soon sent by the Ministry of Environment and
Forests of India. For further inquires on the meeting, please contact: Dr. Kaul
at Kaul52@yahoo.com tel/fax: +91 11 2436 0492 and Dr. Lei, Ramsar Secretariat
at lei@ramsar.org or tel: +41 22 999 0170. [25/11/04]
Standing
Committee - change of dates and venue. The Ramsar Standing Committee
Subgroups on COP9 and Finance will be meeting one week later than foreseen,
and the venue has been changed to the Secretariat facilities in Gland, Switzerland.
The Subgroup on COP9 will now be meeting 7-9 March
2005, and the Subgroup on Finance on the 10th. (The next full Standing
Committee meeting remains scheduled for 6-10 June 2005 in Gland.) [25/11/04]
Montpellier
workshop on francophone African wetlands. On behalf of the French
Ministry of Ecology and Sustainable Development, ATEN
(the Atelier Technique des Espaces Naturelles) is organizing a "Journées
de rencontres" workshop on wetland management for Montpellier, France,
29 November to 4 December 2004. Partners in developing the meeting are the
Ramsar Convention Secretariat, Wetlands International, the Office national de
la chasse et de la faune sauvage, La Station Biologique du Tour du Valat, and
the Centre de Recherche des etudes Agronomiques des Régions Chaudes,
and the subject will be "Préparation des dispositifs de formation
des gestionnaires de zones humides de 5 pays d'Afrique francophone". Representatives
of five African French-speaking countries, Algeria, Benin, Burkina Faso, Senegal
and Madagascar, will participate in the sessions, which are intended to strengthen
institutional cooperation among actors; update the diagnosis of needs and resources;
establish a work plan for the construction of training mechanisms; and define
a strategy of financing of conservation actions. The Ramsar Senior Advisor,
Abou Bamba, will make a presentation on Ramsar recommendations and Strategic
Plan 2003-2008 related to training and capacity building, and his assistant,
Ahmed El-Sabban, will present the Ramsar Handbooks series. More information
at http://www.zhaf.espaces-naturels.fr/accueil/#partenaires.
[25/11/04]
Now
available. 3rd Pan-American Ramsar meeting's
"Merida message". The pre-COP9 regional meeting for North,
Central, and South America and the Caribbean area took place 7-12 November 2004
in Mérida, Mexico, and one of the tangible results of the sessions was
agreement upon a regional workplan for the period leading up to the COP in 2005,
embodied in a resolution called the "Merida
Message" (Mensaje
de Mérida). The draft versions, not for citation, are now available
in both English and Español. [23/11/04]
Now
available. Presentations for the Pan-European Ramsar
meeting. The 5th European Regional
Meeting on the implementation and effectiveness of the Ramsar Convention
will be taking place in Yerevan, Armenia, from 4 to 8 December 2004. "How
best to implement the Convention? Are we doing enough? Are our approaches still
adapted to new pressures of an evolving situation in Europe and the World? Where
can we do better? What are our constraints? How to overcome them? Where does
the Ramsar Convention stand at the beginning of the 21st century? How to interact
with our partners and other stakeholders?" -- these are some of the Aims
of the Meeting, and many of the papers and presentations that will be
read and discussed during the sessions can now be previewed
here in PDF format, with still more to follow early next week. [24/11/04]
Ramsar
and Danone promote safe access to water in Cambodia. For
more than 10 years, hydrogeologist Pierre Gubri
has been digging wells in the villages of the Banteay Srei province, first from
his own efforts and then with the help of the Ramsar Convention and the DANONE/Evian
Fund, and a total of 34 wells and water pumps have been built in three communes
and eight villages. The project has been funded by the Ramsar Convention, through
the
DANONE/Evian
Fund for the year 2004, with the aim of raising local communities'
awareness of the wise use of water and the conservation of wetlands - through
the establishment of a "safe" water system. It reflects the broader
water vision the Ramsar Convention is now developing. In the next few years,
with the continuation of the DANONE/Evian Fund, Ramsar will maintain its support
to this project and almost certainly develop similar projects. On 17 November
2004, a delegation from the Ramsar Convention and the DANONE Group went to the
villages of Banteay Srei for the official ceremony celebrating the end of the
first phase of the project and the finalization of the first 34 wells - Sebastià
Semene Guitart provides the story. [22/11/04]
Ramsar
news from the World Conservation Congress. IUCN's World Conservation
Congress is presently underway in Bangkok, Thailand, with some 5000 participants
and a nearly uncountable number of workshops, presentations, and business meetings.
Here Ramsar's Sebastià Semene
Guitart supplies a brief report of Ramsar's participation over the first
few days of the meetings, including a lively session of the Global Synthesis
Workshop on "Wetlands, water, health and livelihoods", chaired by
Ramsar Standing Committee member Paul Mafabi, Uganda Wetlands Inspection
Division, and sponsored by IUCN's Water and Nature Initiative, Ramsar, International
Water Management Institute, and a sponsored workshop on "Managing water
resources from the Ramsar Convention", chaired by Secretary General Peter
Bridgewater and featuring speakers from Mexico, Cambodia, and the United
States, as well as from Danone Group. [22/11/04]
Vacancy
announcement. Wetlands
International seeks project
manager on wetlands and poverty reduction. Wetlands
International has received from the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, DGIS,
a grant contribution under the TMF funding mechanism for a global project on
"Wetlands and Poverty Reduction". This presents an exciting and significant
opportunity for Wetlands International to promote the role of wetlands in sustainable
development through a partnership approach with the development sector. The
Project Manager will be responsible for the contributing to project development
and for effective implementation of all components and sub-projects within the
global project, as well as meeting donor requirements of accounting and reporting
in a timely and efficient manner.
[link
later removed] [23/11/04]
Kyoto
Protocol to enter into force 16 February 2005.
The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) announced
on 18 November that "The 90-day countdown to the Kyoto Protocol's entry
into force was triggered today by the receipt of the Russian Federation's instrument
of ratification by the United Nations Secretary-General. The Protocol will become
legally binding on its 128 Parties on 16 February 2005. 'A period of uncertainty
has closed. Climate change is ready to take its place again at the top of the
global agenda,' said Joke Waller-Hunter, Executive Secretary of the Climate
Change Secretariat, which services the UN Climate Change Convention and its
Kyoto Protocol." More
(PDF). [19/11/04]
Millennium
Assessment's draft Ramsar Synthesis ready for comment.
As part of its extensive
work, the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment is preparing a report which synthesizes
its key findings on issues of particular concern and interest to the Ramsar
Convention. The Ramsar synthesis report, to be entitled "Wetlands
and Water: Ecosystem Services and Human Well-being", has been drafted by
a synthesis team co-led by STRP Chair Max Finlayson
and Rebecca D'Cruz, former Coordinator for
Asia in the Ramsar Secretariat (left), and including a number of other STRP
members and observers. A consultation draft of the MA Ramsar Synthesis Report
has just been sent out by the MA Secretariat to all STRP members and observers
for review and comment, as well as to all STRP National Focal Points and all
Ramsar Contracting Party Administrative Authorities. Interested members of the
public are also invited to comment upon this and the other synthesis reports,
and further information on the
process and the availability of the documents can be found here. [18/11/04]
Announcement.
Ramsar opening for Intern for Africa. The Ramsar
Secretariat welcomes applications for the position of Intern/Assistant
Advisor for the Africa Region, a 12-month posting (possibly extendable
to 18 months) in the Ramsar Secretariat in Switzerland to begin as soon as possible
after 28 February 2005. With an age limit
for applicants of 30 years old, the post offers an opportunity for young graduates
to become acquainted with the workings of an intergovernmental treaty dealing
with the conservation and sustainable use of natural resources. Candidates for
this internship should be nationals of countries in Africa and have lived most
of their lives in the region. Full ability to work in English and French is
required for this post. Prospective candidates: please view the General
Terms of Reference for Ramsar internships (also available from the Secretariat),
which includes conditions of service and salary structure, and send the application
form attached to the General Terms of Reference, a covering letter, both in
English and French, explaining your interest in an internship with the Ramsar
Secretariat and your future career goals, your CV, as well as two letters of
reference from your previous supervisors or dean of the faculty where you carried
out your studies, to jobapplications@iucn.org. The deadline for applications
is 9 December 2004. [18/11/2004] ![]()
Ramsar
assists in international environmental law competition. The
Secretary General, Peter Bridgewater, served as one of the three judges
in the Stetson University College of Law's Ninth Annual International Environmental
Moot Court Competition, Saturday, 29-30 October 2004, in the state of Florida,
USA. It is the only moot court competition that focuses exclusively on international
environmental issues, and this year's problem focused on legal liability related
to alien invasive species affecting a Wetland of International Importance. Here
is a brief illustrated report. [17/11/04]
Announcement.
Preparations
for the 12th meeting of the Scientific & Technical review Panel (STRP12),
1-4 February 2005. As
previously announced, the next full meeting of the STRP will be held from Tuesday
1 February to Friday 4 February 2005, at the Ramsar Secretariat offices in Gland,
Switzerland. This will be the last plenary meeting of the Panel in the 2003-2005
triennium, and its primary focus will need to be on finalizing those guidelines
and other materials prepared by the STRP which will be considered by COP9 in
November 2005. Concerning the range of other detailed review and technical report
materials being prepared by STRP Working Groups but which will not be considered
by COP for adoption, as and when these become finalized they will be circulated
to the Panel for its approval and then issued as reports in a new "Ramsar
Technical Report" series which is being established with the
approval of the STRP Chair, Chair of Standing Committee, and Chair of the Standing
Committee Subgroup on Finance. Here is
more detail from Nick Davidson on the planning for the upcoming meeting.
[17/11/04]
From
the Wetlands Forum. Raptors in Malaysian Ramsar
sites. "Dear all. Some good news on the Malaysian Ramsar sites
of Johor state. There have been excellent consistent sightings lead by the Parks
staff and various nature interest groups of the migratory raptors, notably of
Black Bazas -Aciceda Leuphotes and Oriental Honey-Buzzards Pernis
Ptilorhynchus. This confirms the theory and belief that some raptors migrate
via the southern most tip of mainland Asia (where Tanjung Piai -Ramsar ref:
1289 & Kukup Ramsar ref: 1287 Ramsar sites in Malaysia are located) These
raptors heads towards the direction of Indonesia namely Sumatra and the Riau
Archipelago. Little research has done here previously due to infrastructural
inaccessibility. Hence this discovery is vital as it would generate tremendous
interest and put these national parks / Ramsar sites in the raptors migration
map. Regards, Harban Singh (sharban@pd.jaring.my), Ramsar Manager, PJNJ Johor,
Malaysia." [17/11/04]
Headline
story. Ramsar
sets targets in Mexico. The
Minister of the Environment and Natural Resources of Mexico, His Exc. Alberto
Cárdenas Jiménez (pictured left), the Secretary General
of the Ramsar Convention, Mr. Peter Bridgewater, and the Director General
of the Canadian Wildlife Service and Chair of the Ramsar Standing Committee's
subgroup on finance, Mr. Trevor Swerdfager, opened the 3rd Pan-American
Regional meeting of the Contracting Parties to the Ramsar Convention in Merida,
Yucatan, Mexico. Speaking in the name of President Vicente Fox, Minister
Cárdenas reiterated the importance of the conservation of wetlands
and water resources in Mexico's political agenda, already demonstrated last
February with the designation of 34 Ramsar sites for World Wetlands Day 2004.
"Conserving and using wetlands in a sustainable way is very important at
the regional scale and fundamental to recover the environmental health of our
planet", said Cárdenas, while highlighting the need for an integrated
approach in managing water resources at the river basins scale "taking
into account the social perspective and the search for a sustainable human development,
which is everyone's responsibility". Full story (with pictures)
here. Reported by Sebastià Semene Guitart, Ramsar Secretariat
[09/11/04] ![]()
Announcement.
African Regional Preparatory Meeting for COP9
to be held in Tanzania. The Government of Tanzania has officially
accepted to host the Africa Regional Preparatory Meeting for COP9 in the city
of Arusha from 6-9 of April 2005. At its 30th meeting,
the Convention's Standing Committee recognized the value of mid-term meetings
of regional groupings of Contracting Parties and pre-accession countries in
preparation of the 9th Conference of the Parties (COP9) to be held in Kampala,
Uganda, 7-15 November 2005 with the theme Wetlands and water - supporting
life, sustaining livelihoods. The Regional Meeting of the African Contracting
Parties aims to analyze the major issues and concerns that characterize the
expansion of the Convention and its work in the region. It will provide the
opportunity to share experience and to discuss common problems, major achievements,
and the need for future actions. Additional information will follow soon. [05/11/04]
Evian
Encounter on Himalayan region. Ramsar's Evian
Encounter for the Himalaya-Hindu Kush-Pamir-Allay region and the Mekong River
basin countries is presently under way in Evian, France, 1-6 November
2004. The Evian Encounter series of seminars is part of a Ramsar Convention
project financed by the France-based Danone Group, which includes the Evian
Mineral Waters Society. The Encounters are designed to be discussions among
high-level officials from the Contracting Parties to the Convention of current
approaches to the implementation of the Ramsar Convention. This year's session,
however, is being organized for both Contracting and non-Contracting Parties
from the area under study. As the Himalayas function as Asia's water tower and
are popularly known as the "roof of the world", with unique ecological
and cultural values, they require a global focus for action. The Ramsar Convention
Secretariat is very pleased to see a regional initiative emerging from the collective
efforts of the countries in the region supported by the
International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD),
WWF International, and Ramsar,
as well as individual experts. This meeting will be a further step to consolidate
the initiative and define its modus operandi for effective regional cooperation
on the conservation and wise use of wetlands in this shared watershed, in continuing
fulfillment of Ramsar Resolution VIII.12 on mountain wetlands.
Here is the programme in PDF format. [01/11/04]
Seminar
on the role of ecosystems as water suppliers, Geneva, 13-14 December 2004. Switzerland
is organizing a seminar on the role of ecosystems as water suppliers which will
take place on 13 and 14 December 2004 in Geneva, at the Palais des Nations.
The Seminar is being prepared by the Swiss Agency for the Environment, Forests
and Landscape and the Economic Commission for Europe of the United Nations
(UNECE) secretariat of the Water Convention, in close cooperation with that
of the 1971 Ramsar Convention on Wetlands and of the UNECE Timber
Committee. Please find the information under:
http://www.unece.org/env/water/meetings/ecosystem/seminar.htm. The
need to adopt an integrated approach and the role of ecosystems in water management
has been increasingly recognized in past years, but putting it into practice
with concrete measures is a complex exercise and a great challenge for every
country. The seminar seeks to take stock of the available experience in the
UNECE region, share best practices and bring in valuable expertise from other
regions. To this aim Mr. Philippe Roch, Swiss State
Secretary, has addressed a letter to the Ministers of Environment,
Forestry and Agriculture in the UNECE region inviting them to submit national
reports on the practical experience of integration of forests and wetlands in
water management. [01/11/04]
World
Wetlands Day 2005 materials ready for distribution. World Wetlands
Day falls on 2 February every year, and each year since 1997, government agencies,
non-governmental organizations, and groups of citizens at all levels of the
community have taken advantage of the opportunity to
undertake actions aimed at raising public awareness of wetland values and benefits
in general and the Ramsar Convention in particular. In 2004, some
250 events in 85 countries were reported to us in the Secretariat and
described on our Web pages. Every year, with generous financial assistance from
the private sector Danone Group, the Secretariat has offered a new selection
of posters, stickers, videos, pocket calendars, leaflets and information packs
free of charge, and this year is no exception - an attractive and thought-provoking
poster and three new stickers have been produced and are now available in English,
French, or Spanish for event organizers all over the world, as well as in electronic
format for those who might wish to customize them or print large quantities
for themselves. In a break from the past, this year stocks of these materials
have been shipped to the Convention's Administrative Authorities in the national
governments of member States, and we are providing a list of contacts in all
of these countries to whom event organizers should direct their requests in
the first instance. Click here for further
information about the available materials and how to order them. [28/10/04]
![]()
Ramsar
in Norway. A Mid-Scandinavian symposium
on the management of Trondheimfjord took place on 8-10 October 2004
in Stiklestad, Norway, organized by the Nord-Trøndelag county group of
Norsk Ornitologisk Forening, the BirdLife International partner in Norway.
Trondheimfjord
is one of the longest fjords in Norway, surrounded by much agricultural land.
Especially along its eastern shores, an important number of tidal and shallow
water zones and flats, river estuaries and shoreline wetlands remain. Currently
the two counties of South and Nord Trøndelag harbour six Ramsar Sites.
"How to make best use of the Ramsar Convention tools by using them as an
instrument for environmental planning and management" was the theme of
a presentation at the symposium and of a special meeting of Ramsar's Adviser
for Europe with the national and regional environment authorities and the mayors
of the communes alongside Trondheimfjord. The briefing provided a useful occasion
for conveying Ramsar's integrated approach at catchment basin level, including
biological factors, but also social, institutional, economic and cultural aspects.
Here is Ramsar's Tobias Salathé's
characteristically informative and well-illustrated brief report on the meeting
and field trip afterward. [28/10/04]
Visit
by the delegation from Hunan Province, China. Invited by the Secretary
General, Dr. Peter Bridgewater, the Hunan
Delegation led by Mr. Yang Zhengwu, the
Chairman of the Standing Committee of the People's Congress of Hunan, China,
visited the Ramsar Convention Secretariat on 24 October 2004.
[29/10/04]
New
publication. Atlas of Loktak published.
Wetlands International, Loktak Development Authority, and India-Canada Environment
Facility have brought out a publication 'Atlas of Loktak lake' that presents
information on ecological, hydrological and socio-economic aspects of this Wetland
of International Importance in India. The book is the outcome of the project
on sustainable development and water resources management of Loktak Lake with
financial support provided by India-Canada Environmental Facility. Loktak
lake is the largest wetland in the northeast of India, traditionally used for
agriculture and fisheries.
[29/10/04]
Sri
Lanka launches National Wetland Policy. "During the past 15
years, Sri Lankan Authorities have increasingly recognized the importance of
wetlands and their management. The first major step was the establishment of
the National Wetland Steering Committee (NWSC) in 1990 with Cabinet approval,
which was reconstituted in 2003, in order to integrate plans for wetland areas
and to coordinate development and conservation activities. . . . The Ministry
of Environment and Natural Resources, after having gone through a very wide
consultative process, where all relevant stakeholders including the general
public in country were involved, ultimately prepared the National Wetland Policy
which was approved by the Government of Sri Lanka in May 2004." Here
is a brief report on the policy and the way forward by Deputy Director T M A
S K Rodrigo. [28/10/04]
International
Canvasback Award for Canada's Ken Cox. David
A. Smith, Chief Division of Bird Habitat Conservation, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, describes the presentation of the
International Canvasback Award to Canada's Ken Cox on behalf of the North American
Waterfowl Management Committee and partners in the United States.
[27/10/04]
Vacancy
announcement. Mekong vacancy for Environmental Economist.
The joint UNDP/ IUCN / MRC Mekong River
Basin Wetland Biodiversity Conservation and Sustainable Use Programme
is a five-year programme of activities in the four lower Mekong countries. The
Programme will strengthen the mechanisms for conservation of wetland biodiversity
and assist the four countries with testing sustainable use approaches in demonstration
sites. The programme is being managed from a Programme Management Unit (PMU)
in Vientiane, Lao PDR. Presently the programme is seeking an Environmental Economist
-- the position will initially be for a period of two years with possibility
of extension for a further three years. Candidates from the four Lower Mekong
countries (Cambodia, Lao PDR, Thailand and Vietnam) will be given preference.
The deadline for applications is 10 November 2004.
[link
later removed] [27/10/04]
Announcement.
Management of transboundary Ramsar Sites - Chances and Challenges.
An International Conference from 18-19th November 2004, Austria. Many Wetlands
of International Importance listed under the Ramsar Convention are located in
border zones of adjoining countries. Despite their obvious transboundary connectivity,
these "shared wetlands" are often not perceived and treated as ecological
and hydrological units. This poses a major challenge to wetland conservation,
not only in terms of habitat management, regional planning and decision making,
but also with respect to environmental education and public awareness activities.
The conference will provide a forum for an intensive exchange of experience
concerning these issues. It is intended for all persons involved in transboundary
wetland conservation and management, namely conservation specialists, environmental
educators and public relations officers from protected areas, experts in regional
planning and members of higher administrative bodies responsible for transboundary
Ramsar sites. Full
details here (PDF file). [25/10/04]
A
loss for wetland conservation. The
staff of the Ramsar Secretariat are grieved by the death of Vadim
Georgievitch Vinogradov who passed away on the 8th of October 2004
at his home in Moscow, Russia,
one day before his 56th birthday. Vadim Vinigradov
graduated from Moscow University, Faculty of Geography in 1971, and worked at
the Faculty's Eastern Expedition in 1971-1977, at the Research Institute for
Nature Conservation in 1977-1995, at the International Foundation of Reforms
in 1995-1998, at the Federal Research Institute for Medical Problems of Health
in 1998-2001, and at the Institute of Geography of the Russian Academy of Science
from 2001. In his scientific studies, Vadim Vinogradov formulated the basic
principles of wetland ecosystem dynamics in connection with their status in
the system of biogeocoenosis successions, developed the national wetland classification
and compiled the first national estimation of waterfowl populations by species
(together with Vitaly Krivenko), developed the scheme of territorial zonation
of the country for the purpose of wetland inventory, and carried out research
on wetlands and water birds in many localities. Vadim worked on the Ramsar Convention
from the early stages of its development. Thanks to his efforts, many important
objectives of the Convention were translated into national strategic, legislative
and managerial instruments.
[22/10/04]
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.
|
Highlights from World Wetlands Day. Schoolchildren in Peninsula de Macanao, Isla de Margarita, Venezuela. |