The Ramsar Archives
Headline
Story. EU's Water Framework Directive.
Approximately 50 people representing national and European NGOs met in Brussels
on 22 & 23 October to discuss progress with the European Union's proposed
Water Framework Directive. Participants heard detailed presentations from the
officials responsible in the European Commission, from a speaker on behalf of
the Council of Ministers, and from a number of NGO and water industry representatives.
The Directive, currently in draft form, was generally thought by those present
to provide a useful framework for addressing water problems in Europe. In particular,
the focus on river basin management, and the development of effective and enforceable
strategies to secure progressive improvement in the biological and chemical
quality of surface water, ground water, and coastal waters, were all welcomed.
However, the draft Directive was also criticised as being too weak in relation
to some of the goals, targets and timetables it proposes for improvement. Further
information about the seminar can be obtained from WWF's European Freshwater
Officer, Ms Jane Madgwick. [4/11/98]
Reading
Alert: French
fishponds! The latest
issue of the newsletter Zones Humides Infos, published
by the wetland expert group set up by the French Ministry of Land-use Planning
and Environment, is dedicated to the conservation management of fish pond complexes
in France. Find out a little more about
here, then go read the mag. [4/11/98]
Recalibration note: Scott Frazier of Wetlands International,
Keeper of the Sacred List, advises that recent updates from the Parties on the listed
sites will require some changes in the Ramsar List totals, including a reduction of total
sites from 957 to 956, alas. More details to follow. [4/11/98]
Ex-Headline
Story. Wetland Conservation
Award winners announced.
After long deliberations, the 21st meeting of the Ramsar Standing Committee
succeeded in selecting winners for the Ramsar Wetland Conservation Award, out
of an impressive host of nominations. In the three categories of awards
(individuals, NGOs, and governmental organizations], five
winners were chosen -- that's how tough the competition was. In the individuals
category, Vitaly G. Krivenko of the Russian Federation
shares the Award with Victor Pulido of Peru. In the NGOs
category, Lake Naivasha Riparian Association of
Kenya shares the prize with Society for the Protection of Prespa
in Greece, and in the strange category of Government/Non-governmental
Coalitions, the winner is the Pacific Estuary Conservation Program of
Canada. The formal announcements, with interviews, photos, videos, testimonials,
whatever else may be appropriate, will take place on World Wetlands Day, 2 February
1999, and the actual Awards will be bestowed in the opening ceremonies of the
7th Meeting of the Conference of the Contracting Parties, in May 1999 in San
José, Costa Rica -- in the meantime, here
is an advance briefing on the five winners. [2/11/98] [français,
español]
New
on the Site:
One more National
Report this evening, once again in Asia: Bangladesh.
[5/11/98]
Who's Where . . . . . . .
Delmar Blasco, the Secretary General, has gone off to Fontainebleau for festivities marking the 50th anniversary of IUCN-The World Conservation Union.
Anada Tiéga, RC for Africa, is off on a long mission that will take him to Botswana to advise on the formulation of a National Wetland Policy; to Nairobi, Kenya, for discussions concerning Tanzania's planned accession to the Convention; to Dakar, Senegal, for the 2nd International Conference on Wetlands and Development, along with others from the Bureau; and to "W" National Park for talks on a joint action plan for the "W" area of the Niger River Basin with Benin, Burkina Faso, Niger, and Togo.
United
Kingdom names two new sites on south coast.
"Dorset Heathlands" and "Solent and Southampton Water" have
been added to UK's list of 118 Ramsar sites, with eight more already announced
and awaiting completion of the paperwork. Here's
a brief description of the new ones. The Convention now covers some
70,429,156 hectares in 957 sites in 113 Contracting Parties. [français,
español] [30/10/98]
Headline
Story. Madagascar joins the Convention, names first Resolution VI.5
Ramsar site. The
Bureau is delighted to announce that as of 25 September 1998, Madagascar
has become the 113th Contracting Party to the Ramsar Convention on
Wetlands, so that the treaty will come into force for Madagascar on 25 January
1999. Two sites were named as initial Wetlands of International Importance,
Complexe des lacs de Manambolomaty and Lac Tsimanampetsotsa, the latter of which
is the first Ramsar site to be named under the new type added to the Ramsar
Classificiation System by Resolution VI.5 (Brisbane COP6, 1996), "Subterranean
karst and cave hydrological systems". Read
more about them both, right here. [27/10/98] [français]
Wrong! Scott Frazier corrects us by pointing out that the designation of Lake Kutubu in Papua New Guinea, announced here a few weeks ago, was actually the first subterranean karst designation, and we didn't notice! Well . . . [29/10/98]
Announcements:.
International
Environmental Law and Policy, text
and reference book, has just been published by the Center for International
Environmental Law. Here are
a description, brief reviews, and the table of contents. [29/10/98]
INFO-COAST
'99 1st European Symposium
on Knowledge and Information for the Coastal Zone set for Noordwijkerhout, The
Netherlands, 11-13 Feb, 1999 -- Details and
Registration Form now available! [27/10/98]
2nd
International Conference on Wetlands and Development.
Simon Nash provides a last-minute
teaser on the Dakar conference. [28/10/98]
Tidal
Wetlands Impacts Data Home Page
launched in the State of Virginia, USA; here's
the announcement to the Ramsar Forum. [29/10/98]
Asian
Anatidae Atlas Project -- call for information. Here's
your chance to get in on the Asian Anatidae action, perhaps. Read
this now! [28/10/98]
International
Conference on Shallow Tropical Waters and Humans, 11-16
April 1999, Naivasha, Kenya. Here's
the skinny. [28/10/98]
Standing
Committee now withdrawing in an orderly fashion. Following an exhausting week (19-24 October) at the
Convention's secretariat in Gland, Switzerland, the 21st Standing Committee meeting's
members and observers have set off for home, probably in a daze. The longest agenda
in bureaucratic history was successfully got through by Friday night, and since most of
the minutes were approved during the meeting, the results will appear here soon.
Decisions were taken on a host of conservation and wise use issues, and sadly, but
probably necessarily, on a few political issues as well, all of it intended for
presentation to the 7th Meeting of the Conference of the Contracting Parties in San José,
Costa Rica, in May 1999. Some 75 participants (not counting the
secretariat), representing 37 governments as Standing Committee and
Observer States as well as the four Partner Organizations (BirdLife International, IUCN,
Wetlands International, and WWF International), not only filled the IUCN HQ's main meeting
hall but, with the partitions thrown back, filled both adjacent meeting halls as well and
consumed 12,550 liters of coffee (rounded figure), gratefully. [26/10/98]
As usual, we will soon publish here the meeting's minutes in English and the summary, with all the decisions, in English, French, and Spanish, and with a lot of photographs into the bargain.
Another treat soon to come: "Wise Use of Wetlands", a rich article from UNESCO's Nature and
Resources magazine, 1988 --
soon to be reprinted here (if we can get UNESCO's permission to reprint).
Co-authored by Ed Maltby, Marge Holland, Joe Larson, and the late Ted Hollis, this seminal
work explored all the implications of the wise use concept and illustrated them with case
studies, and it helped to define the broadening of the Ramsar Convention's focus from
waterbird habitats to human issues of sustainable use of water resources. Scanned
from an old photocopy, the reprint will be missing the hugely ornamental photographs, but
every golden word will be preserved. Soon . . . . . Let
anticipation grow! [21/10/98] [here it is]
Ukraine completes designation
process for 22 (!!) Ramsar sites. Ukraine set
some sort of record for wholesale designations when paperwork was completed on 22 Ramsar
sites, included in a decree of the Cabinet of Ministers dated 23 November 1995, covering a
surface area of 716,250 hectares. Four
Ramsar sites in the territory of Ukraine that were originally designated by the former
Soviet Union (11 October 1976) as Kylijske Gyrlo, Karkinitski Bay, Sivash Bay, and
Yagorlits & Tendrov Bays have been redesignated as six sites, with modified
boundaries, and included amongst these 22 designations. There are too many new sites
to describe them individually, but most of the new Wetlands of International Importance
fall in the Danube Delta area in the Odeska Oblast, around the mouth of the Dnieper River
(Europe's third largest), and along the shores of the Sea of Azov. Many of the sites were
designated under the 1% and/or 20,000 waterbird criteria, but some cited the fish and
uniqueness criteria as well. The beautiful maps included with the Ramsar Information
Sheets are enough to start one thinking along the lines of a study mission in the
near-term future. [16/10/98]
Announcements:
Directory
of Wetland Management Training Opportunities
is now available on this Web site. Promised some time ago as part of the Wise
Use Resource Centre, the Directory has been developed over the past half-year
by the Ramsar Interns and will hopefully be expanded and improved by your input.
Here it is.
[19/10/98]
Seminario
Internacional sobre Biodiversidad, Propiedad Intelectual y Derechos Indigenas.
La Universidad de las Regiones Autónomas de la Costa Caribe Nicaragüense/URACCAN
y El Instituto de Recursos Naturales Medio Ambiente y Desarrollo Sostenible/IREMADES
Te invitan a participar en el Seminario
Internacional sobre Biodiversidad, Propiedad Intelectual y Derechos Indigenas.
Fecha: del 4 al 7 de Noviembre de 1998. [19/10/98]
6th
Northeast Asia and North Pacific Environmental Forum Workshop
is planned for Yueyang City, People's Republic of China, 17-20 December 1998.
Read about it here. [18/10/98]
Biodiversity-related
Conventions move towards info cooperation. A
6-7 October meeting in foggy Bonn, Germany, of technical staff from the five
biodiversity-related Conventions was magno-fun for the delegates and may in
the end prove helpful for you as well. The participants probed through
the recently-completed WCMC study on harmonization of information management
amongst the five conventions and ferreted out several good things that can be
done soon and cheaply, and did them, or at least got a rolling start.
The first product will be a common "Entry Page" to the Web sites of
the five Convention secretariats, weblinked to a menu of analagous parts of
each, and you can read more about the whole concept -- right
here -- if you dare. [9/10/98]
Vacancy announcement. BirdLife
seeks 1-year consultant for Vietnam.
BirdLife International's Vietnam Programme is offering a 1-year appointment as Project
Officer. The project's objectives are: 1) to identify key wetland sites for biodiversity
conservation, using indicator species and Ramsar criteria; 2) to conduct a preliminary
assessment of current resource-use and of any future development plans at each site; 3) to
produce a strategy prescription for the conservation of key biodiversity sites in the
Mekong Delta; 4) to advocate the prescriptive measures, including need for protected area
establishment and Ramsar designation, among relevant provincial and central government
agencies; 5) to develop a project proposal to address the conservation of a priority site
or sites identified by the project; and 6) to provide training in survey and conservation
assessment for scientific staff. Here is the announcement.
[10/10/98]
Announcement.
Wetland management training
opportunity in Karachi. Here's
the text of the brochure explaining the
International Course on Wetland Conservation and Management,
10-24 February 1999, set for Karachi, Pakistan. Looks like fun. [11/10/98]
Bureau's
EPA Workshop reported. The Ramsar
Bureau recently hosted a 2-day workshop, 24-25 September, on Education
and Public Awareness programmes for wetland conservation and wise use,
with financial assistance from the Evian Project.
Distressed by the disjunction between global efforts to coordinate EPA efforts
and, on the other hand, the wonderful work being done all the time here and
there, by government agencies and NGOs all over the world, all the time, the
Bureau invited representatives of a number of energetic programmes to stare
at one another across our tables and explain to one another what they're doing
- and arrange to share and cooperate and liaise and get to know one another
better in future. Participants included representatives of GREEN (Global
Rivers Environmental Education Network), Water Watch Asia and Waterwatch Australia,
the Ghana Wildlife Society, the IUCN Commission on Education, Universiti Sains
Malaysia, Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust, Wetlands International's Specialist Group
on E/PA, the Watercourse Program/Project WET in the USA, the People and Conservation
Unit of WWF International, Water Planet of Sweden. Here's
a brief report on the meeting. [10/10/98]
New
intern joins the Ramsar Bureau. Ms Musonda
Mumba arrived in the Bureau today and got dragged round the Grand Tour of the
IUCN HQ. Ms Mumba has a BSc from the University of Zambia and has completed a number
of specialist post-grad training programmes, including the UNEP/UNESCO International
Postgraduate Course in Environmental Management for Developing Countries in Dresden,
Germany. She is employed by the Environmental Council of Zambia in Lusaka, the Ramsar
administrative authority in the country, and she represented Zambia as an observer state
at the 20th meeting of the Ramsar Standing Committee, October 1997. She has
special expertise in invasive species of aquatic weeds and has recently been coordinating
a project for the biological control of water hyacinth on the Kafue River and part of the
Kafue Flats Ramsar site. It is envisaged that part of her work in the Bureau will have to
do with beginning an assessment of National Wetland Policies and related instruments in
Africa. Musonda is succeeding Ahoua Traore of Côte dIvoire,
who plans to stay on in Geneva for studies at the Graduate Institute of Development
Studies. Nonetheless, all Bureau personnel were in tears throughout the day about
Ahoua's departure. [6/10/98]
Ramsar
and RIZA visit Armenia. Like most
right-thinking citizens, you've learned to yawn promptly at the bureaucracy's
long and ubiquitous "trip reports". But Ramsar's
trip reports are different. For example, take
this report of the Bureau's recent trip to Armenia -- it's got
nearly everything you could wish for: succinct background on Armenia's Ramsar
history, a quick but penetrating look at both of its Ramsar sites, a synopsis
of the problems yet to be faced, a capsule itinerary that will make you wish
you'd been there, a lean set of recommendations and action points for follow-up,
and some well-chosen scenic and people photos that will bring the whole thing
to life for you, or almost. Tim Jones of the Bureau and
Frank Alberts, Head of RIZA's Land Use Planning Division, made
the trip, 3-11 September of this year, and this is the result. [29/9/98]
Wetlands
Conference set for Russian Federation. An
important conference on "A Strategy for wetland conservation in the Russian
Federation" is scheduled for 24-26 February 1999 in Moscow, Russia.
Organized by the State Committee of the Russian Federation on Environmental
Protection and the Wetlands International - Russia Programme, the conference
is intended to bring together representatives from key government agencies,
NGOs, scientific institutions and other stakeholders to review the current state
of wetland conservation in Russia, and to develop A National Strategy and Action
Plan for Wetland Conservation in the Russian Federation. Here's
the announcement. [27/9/98]
This may be
the book for you. The Bureau has
received a couple of boxes of the new book, Mediterranean Wetlands:
Socioeconomic Aspects, edited by Nejib Benessaiah and
published by DG XI of the European Commission for the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands.
Very attractively presented and featuring both a wide coverage of key topics and
close looks at five well-known "pilot" wetlands in the Med Basin, this 165-page
book is surely available elsewhere, too, but we have a number that we can give away to
people who will appreciate them and treat them well and give them a good home. Write
to Valerie Higgins in the Bureau and
specify whether you'd like the English, French, or Arabic edition. [28/9/98]
More to follow. Watch this space.
Feedback and suggestions to: the Ramsar Convention Bureau, 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.
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Issues of the Bulletin Board. Early in every month the current edition of
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page, and you can dig through the back issues there -- their contents are still
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