The Ramsar Archives
4
January 1999![]()
Headline
Story:
Ramsar's new logo enters into force. The
Ramsar Standing Committee, in Decision 21.4 of its October 1998 meeting, adopted
a new logo which better expresses the evolving mission of the Convention.
Today, 1 January 1999, the new logo comes into force and will be used from now
on as Ramsar's corporate graphical identity on letterhead paper, publications,
Web site, business cards, etc. Here's
some explanatory text on the new logo, prepared for our first announcement
of the change posted here on 27 November. [1/1/99]
New
on the Site: New
National Reports: Switzerland,
Finland, the Russian
Federation, Portugal,
and Hungary today;
Report on the Oceania Regional
Meeting, and Bill
Phillips' closing remarks; Registration materials for COP7
(English, French, and Spanish). [5/1/99]
Who's Where . . . . . . .
The Secretary General, Delmar Blasco, has gone to Chile for consultations on the continuing development of a national strategy for the conservation of wetlands in that country, and will then proceed to Argentina for talks with the Administrative Authority. After a little time there on home leave, he will be back in the Ramsar Bureau in early January.
Yueyang
Declaration reprinted here. The
Sixth Northeast Asia and North Pacific Environmental Forum was held in Yueyang
City, Hunan Province, China from 17-20 December 1998. It was attended by 92
representatives from governmental and non-governmental organisations, and environmental
experts from China, Japan, Mongolia, Republic of Korea, the Russian Federation,
the United States, and also from international organisations. The meeting was
organised by Wetlands International China Programme, the China Environmental
Protection Foundation and the Asia Foundation, with the endorsement of the Chinese
government. Funding was provided by the Keidanren Nature Conservation Fund and
Asia Foundation-Japan Office. The resulting resolution, called the
Yueyang Declaration, has been provided for reprinting here by Faizal
Parish and by Chen Kelin, Coordinator, Wetlands International-China Programme
(Secretariat of Yueyang Workshop). [26/12/98]
"Kintyre
Goose Roosts". The UK has
designated "Kintyre Goose Roosts", a 311-hectare site in Scotland, as its 119th
Wetland of International Importance, effective 28 October. Tim Jones
reports: The Ramsar site comprises five hill lochs (freshwater lakes) on the Kintyre
peninsula in southwest Scotland: Loch Garasdale, Loch an Fhraoich, Loch Lussa, Black Loch
and Tangy Loch. The lochs are of international importance as a winter roost site for the
globally vulnerable Greenland white-fronted goose (Anser albifrons flavirostris).
During the five-winter period 1991/92 - 1995/96 the site held an average of 8% of the
world population, thereby qualifying under Ramsar criterion 3c. Additional biodiversity
values of national importance include the presence of European otters (Lutra lutra)
and, at Tangy Loch, a nationally rare aquatic plant, the slender naiad (Najas flexilis).
The most prevalent human activities within the site are forestry and sport hunting, with sport fishing, fishery production and livestock grazing as secondary uses. The area also has significant aesthetic, landscape and general non-consumptive recreation value.There are no known significant threats to the site at present, although further monitoring may be required to determine the effects of disturbance from forestry and hunting. [23/12/98]
Global
Biodiversity Forum -- call for co-organizers. The
organizers of GBF13, set for San José, Costa Rica, 7-9 May 1999 (immediately
preceding Ramsar COP7), have announced a list of workshops to be held and asked
for feedback from potential participants. Read
the announcement here, and contact the organizers directly.
[22/12/98]
New
call for WFF proposals. The
Ramsar Bureau, the United States State Department, and the United States Fish
and Wildlife Service are soliciting proposals from Latin American and Caribbean
institutions and individuals to participate in the next round of the
Wetlands for the Future (WFF) training program. This initiative strives
to promote the implementation of the concept of "wise use" of wetlands
through strengthening the capacity of countries to manage their wetland resources
in perpetuity and contributing to integrate wetland conservation and management
with the development process. All proposed activities should be in line with
the principles, recommendations and guidelines of the Ramsar Convention.
The update of last year's call for proposals is available here in English
and Spanish. [18/12/98]
Free
offer: Nice symposium minutes, excellent Christmas gift. The Bureau has received a carton of issue no. 10 of
the Cahiers du Conservatoire du Littoral, 272 pages, entitled Utiliser
les politiques foncières pour la protection du littoral méditerranéen / Making best use
of land ownership and land-use policies for the protection of the Mediterranean Basin --
Minutes of the Symposium, Hyères, France, 21-22 April 1995; lots of French and
lots of English, too, all crammed into one volume, bulky but not too difficult to wrap up
in a festive array. We'll send one free to each of the firstcomers -- so write us. [18/12/98]
Convention
to Combat Desertification signs MOC with Ramsar. On
5 December, at the Global Biodiversity Forum during the CCD's 2nd Conference
of the Parties in Dakar, Senegal, Ramsar's Secretary General and the Executive
Secretary of the CCD signed a Memorandum of Cooperation between the two secretariats.
This follows on from Ramsar's MOC and Joint Work Plan with the Convention on
Biological Diversity and can be seen as part of the general movement towards
synergy, coordination, and avoidance of duplication amongst the major biodiversity
conservation treaty secretariats. The
text of the new MOC is right here. [8/12/98]
Position
vacancy in the Bureau. With
the lamented departure of Dr. Montserrat Carbonell, our Regional Coordinator for the
Neotropics, the position is being redefined slightly to Regional Coordinator for the
Americas, and applications are now being sought. The starting date is (hopefully) 1
May 1999 and the deadline for applications is 31 January of the same year. Fluency
in Spanish and English are required, but here, for the moment, is the
English announcement only (the Spanish text follows tomorrow, sorry).
[8/12/98] (Okay, here's the announcement in español.
Thanks for your patience, hispanophones. 9/12/98) [This position has been filled.]
Small
Grants Fund allocations for 1998 announced. The
Standing Committee, at its 21st meeting, pored over a large number of grant
applications and made its determinations . . . sort of. Because of a
funding shortfall, SC21 was constrained to make its allocations in a graduated
tier system which allocated present funding to 17 projects (category A1), for
about 600,000 Swiss francs, and rated another 14 projects (category A2) as eligible
for funding should additional contributions be received in the Fund, and still
another 16 projects (category B)as eligible for funding just in case all the
A1s and A2s should score first. A more substantial report on the actually funded
projects will be written soon, but in the meantime here
is the list of project titles in their category order. [8/12/98]
Recommendation: Web
site of the Towra Point Nature Reserve Ramsar site, 16 miles south of Sydney, Australia. Exceptional:
check it out. [8/12/98]
Announcements: Positions available. Position
vacancy at WWF in Denmark. Campaigner wanted for the WWF European Freshwater
Programme. [9/12/98] [This position has been
filled.]
Announcements: Positions available. WET
(Wetland Ecology and Technology, Contract No. ERBFMRX-CT960051) is offering a
14-months' post-doc in Kiel, Germany. [8/12/98] [This position has been filled.]
Ramsar
staff get new e-mail addresses: Effective
immediately, Ramsar Bureau staff have new e-mail addresses, constructed on the form of
lastname@ramsar.org. Thus the Secretary General is now blasco@ramsar.org, for example, and the Regional
Coordinator for Europe is jones@ramsar.org.
Our general mailbox, perhaps predictably, is at ramsar@ramsar.org.
Our former e-mail addresses, using the domain @hq.iucn.org, will continue to work
forever. [4/12/98]
First
Oceania Regional Meeting opens in Hamilton, New Zealand: On
1 December, following a colorful opening ceremony (a "powhiri") presided
over by a Maori queen, Dame Te Atairangikaahu, and a welcoming
address from the Hon. Marie Hasler, Associate Minister for the Environment,
the meeting set off upon a
full agenda which will keep the participants laboring through to
Friday. Some 60 participants made the trip, and they represent the three
Ramsar Parties in the region (Australia, New Zealand, and Papua New Guinea)
as well as the Cook Islands, Fiji, Wallis and Futuna (French territory), Niue,
Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of Kiribati, Samoa,
the Solomon Islands, Guam (US territory), the Kingdom of Tonga, Tuvalu, the
Northern Mariana Islands (US territory), and Vanuatu. Organizations attending,
with bells on, include BirdLife International, the secretariat of the Convention
on Migratory Species (Bonn Convention), the Society of Wetland Scientists, Wetlands
International, and WWF, as well as Ducks Unlimited NZ, Fish and Game NZ, the
University of Waikato, the Miranda Conservation Board, the Federation of Commercial
Eel Fishers, NZ Federated Farmers, and a number of Maori Trust Boards.
The Deputy Secretary General, Bill Phillips, and the Regional
Coordinator for Asia, Rebecca D'Cruz, are stirring the pot
on the Bureau's behalf, and more results will soon appear here. [2/12/98]
CCD's
2nd Conference of the Parties gets off to a good start. The
Convention to Combat Desertification opened its 2nd COP on Monday, 30 November,
and will keep its collective nose to the grindstone until the 11th of December.
Ramsar's Secretary General, Delmar Blasco, and our Regional
Coordinator for Africa, Anada Tiéga, are participating in the
festivities, and Mr Blasco addressed the plenary session on 1 December -- you
can read his statement here at no extra charge. The daily
goings on can be followed on the Earth Negotiations Bulletin through the International
Institute for Sustainable Development's site, http://www.iisd.ca/desert/cop2/index.html.
[2/12/98]
Web Site
Reorganization [or Reorganisation]: That's
right, we've set up a new index page for the
7th meeting of the Conference of the Contracting Parties, which includes indexes to the
documentation for the COP, the National Reports submitted by the Parties, hotel + travel
information, background skinny, the whole schmear. You are specially privileged to
view it, though as yet it's in its infancy for a little while. [30/11/98]
New
Ramsar logo announced. Just
when you thought you knew where you stood, the Ramsar Convention announces a
new "graphic identity", intended to indicate more convincingly the
Convention's new roles in the broad issues of sustainable use of wetlands and
water resources. Enacted by Decision 21.4 of the recent Standing Committee,
the new logo will be launched on 1 January 1999, and even now, you
can read all about it here. [27/11/98]
MKI
Travel, Inc., posts hotel and travel stuff for COP7.
Calme-toi, all of you who've behaving in an agitated manner in the
absence of firm information about hotel costs and options in San José, Costa
Rica, for the gala 7th Conference of the Parties set to be visited upon that
city in May 1999.
The
Bureau is still creeping towards mailing out invitations to Contracting Parties,
potential observer states, and international NGOs, including all of this information,
but now you must ask yourself: WHY WAIT?
MKI Travel Inc., of Ottawa, who are handling travel and hotel arrangements for
COP7, have set up a brilliant Web site with all the hotel options, maps of the
locations, background info (about the currency, tap water, etc.), booking forms,
you name it, and you will thrill to see those classy navigation bars.
Check it out: http://www.mkitravel.com/conference/ramsarcop799/index.html
[27/11/98]
Pan-Asian
Regional Meeting. The Ramsar Bureau
is pleased to announce that the Government of the Philippines has kindly agreed to provide
the venue for the Pan-Asian Regional Meeting of the Convention on Wetlands (Ramsar, Iran,
1971). The meeting will take place from 22 - 24 February 1999 in Manila, the Philippines.
It is expected that at the meeting there will be consideration of the key topics scheduled
for discussion at COP7. These will include such issues as Ramsar and Water, mechanisms to
enhance regional and transboundary cooperation, how Ramsar can work more effectively in
partnership with the other international conventions, such as the Convention on Biological
Diversity (CBD); capacity building for wetland management; and mobilising development
assistance.For further information, please contact: Rebecca DCruz, Regional
Coordinator for Asia dcruz@ramsar.org. [13/11/98]
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.
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.
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