What's new in the website Dunes of Texel and Amsterdam Waterworks (NL), and Westhoek (B) Complete dossiers on the field management of the Dunes of Texel (a Dutch
Wadden island), the Amsterdam Waterworks Dunes (Dutch mainland coast)
and the Westhoek Dunes (the largest Flemish dune complex) are now available
in the Coastal
Guide on Dune Management. They provide an overview of the area and
their landscape (with maps), natural values, geology and genesis, management,
tourism and 2000
2001
Please note:
New hyperlinks to websites CERU Coastal
& Estuarine Research Unit Coastal
Engineering Page Earth Times Eco-Guide International
Environmental
aspects of the offshore oil and gas development EWA European Water Association
(former EWPCA European Water Pollution Control Association) Check out the other Website
Links on the Coastal Guide
Study points finger at unsustainable aquaculture practices The article "Effect of aquaculture on world fish supplies" by Rosamond L. Naylor published in the journal “Nature” revealed that if not properly managed, fish farming is more of an environmental troublemaker than a saviour. The paper is the combined effort of ten authors, ecologists, economists, fisheries and aquaculture specialists who were approached to evaluate whether farm-raised fish add to the global food supply, as intended, or contribute to the depletion of fish populations world-wide. The team concluded that in some cases aquaculture did more harm than good. One of the aspects causing great concern is the fact that it takes around three pounds of wild caught fish to grow one pound of shrimp or salmon. Other problems are that fish farming also harms the environment by converting wetlands into artificial farms, and by the escape of farmed species that can interbreed with wild stocks and pass on weak or specially inbred genes. Among the recommendations for making fish farming more sustainable world-wide, are:
As the days count down to November's crucial climate summit in The Hague,
a coalition of 16 major environmental organizations today launched the
first international web-based initiative to give citizens around the world
a voice in demanding a halt to global warming. The website http://climatevoice.org
aims to send 10 million messages from the public to world political
leaders demanding that they use the November summit - officially the Sixth
Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
- to reduce the pollution that causes global warming. Governments must
meet their deadline for finalising rules for operating the Kyoto climate
treaty requiring industrialised countries to reduce their emissions of
global warming gases 5 per cent below the level of 1990 by around 2010.
Failing to agree at the climate summit would set the worst possible example
for stopping global warming in the 21st century. In 1990, the UN Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) issued its first scientific report on rising
levels of global warming gases and their implications for the future.
Though impacts characteristic of global warming have since become increasingly
evident on every continent and in most nations, governments have failed
to act to turn down the heat.
HELCOM confirmed role of Estonia and EUCC in ICM promotion Heads of Delegation of the Baltic Marine Environmental Protection Commission
(HELCOM) met in Hamburg on August 22 and confirmed all decisions taken
by the newly convened Nature Conservation and Coastal Zone Management
Group in May this year (see Coastal
Guide News No. 11). The nine Baltic Sea States thereby agreed that
Estonia would take the lead and the European Union for Coastal Conservation
(EUCC) would assist and co-operate in promoting integrated coastal zone
management in the Baltic Sea Area. HELCOM HABITAT is the approved abbreviation
of the new working group “Nature Conservation and Coastal Zone Management”.
In May, HELCOM HABITAT accepted with appreciation the offer by Estonia
to initially take the lead role in the development of ICZM in the region
and by EUCC to provide additional expertise. It furthermore invited both
partners to produce a "state of the art" report on ICZM in the Baltic
region including a list of current projects underway. The Heads of Delegation
encouraged Estonia and EUCC to apply for funding at international financing
institutions such as the Global Environmental Facility of the World Bank.
With this official support by HELCOM, the partners hope to succeed. Det Norske Veritas (DNV), a Norwegian independent foundation providing
safety and reliability services, commissioned a survey about the detention
rates of substandard ships. The results revealed significant differences
between the main societies that grant safety certificates. DNV came out
top with a detention rate of near to three per cent. Second was the Japanese
NK, third the German Germanischer Lloyd, both at four per cent. Lloyd's
Register in the UK was fourth with five per cent, the American Bureau
of Shipping (ABS) follows at six per cent. The French Bureau Veritas was
left last from the six big societies which certify 90 per cent of world
ships, with a detention rate of eight percent. The survey is based on
all detentions published by the Paris MOU on port state control, the Tokyo
MOU and the US Coast Guard, the three main international port state control
bodies. Leaving suspicion aside about the fact that the contractor of
the study scored best, the survey shows the differences between certificates
thus indicating an increasing threat to the environment as aging ships
continue sailing under questionable certificates. The Upper Austrian focal point for energy issues, “O.Ö.Energiesparverband”, calls for submissions for the Energy Globe Award 2001, an international prize for sustainable energy solutions. Deadline is 20 October 2000. For more information, contact Christiane Egger: Tel: +43-732-6584-4382, Fax: +43-732-6584-4383, or visit the website at http://www.esv.or.at/energyglobe.
EU Coastal Strategy expected soon The preparations of the EU Coastal Strategy - based upon the results of the EU Demonstration Programme on ICZM (1996-99)- are still progressing and the Commission's decision is now expected by the end of September. An important contribution to the preparations has been the Opinion of the Committee of the Regions (COR) on the Commission's discussion paper "Towards a European Integrated Coastal Zone Management (ICZM) Strategy". Last April, the COR had expressed support to the development of an EU Strategy and emphasised that local and regional authorities are best equipped to deal with implementation of ICZM policies. Other recommendations of the COR include:
The International Seabed Authority (ISA) adopted rules on international
seabed mining. The mining code governs the prospecting and exploitation
of polymetallic nodules lying outside the 200-mile economic zone of any
country. The regulations are the first segment of mining code that will
eventually govern exploration for and exploitation of all seabed minerals,
clearing the way for mining contracts for European and Asian consortia
(the US Senate so far has not approved the treaty). Preservation and protection
of the marine environment was one of the biggest issues in the negotiations.
Under the code, the authority is obliged to establish environmental rules,
regulations, and procedures, while each contractor must “prevent, contain
and minimise any (…)serious harm to the marine environment." This guarantee
is not required until the contractor is about to begin testing equipment
and systems, rather than at the time of application for a contract. Environmental
issues were those, which nearly torpedoed the negotiations and several
compromises were made in order to ensure the acceptance of the new mining
code. Before exploration will start on large scale, however, new technology
will need to be developed. For more information read the full press release
at
Deadline for submitting contributions to Coastal
Guide News No 18:
COASTAL GUIDE NEWS is a biweekly newsletter published by the European Union for Coastal Conservation (EUCC) with financial support of Stichting DOEN, the foundation of the Dutch lottery "Postcode Loterij" and the Department of International Nature Affairs of the Dutch Ministry of Agriculture, Nature Management and Fisheries. For free subscriptions, comments or contributions to this newsletter, please contact news@coastalguide.org. Members of the Coastal Guide News editorial team: Erik Devilee,
Levente Galambosi, Irene Lucius, Hanneke Mesters, René van Oers,
and Albert Salman. Established in 1989, the European Union for Coastal Conservation (EUCC)
is an association involving the largest coastal network in Europe with
750 members and member organisations in 40 countries. Coastal Guide News
subscribers are encouraged to join the EUCC as a member. For more information
please contact EUCC International Secretariat, POB 11232, NL-2301 EE Leiden,
the Netherlands, tel.: +31-71-5122900, Internet: http://www.eucc.nl
© European Union for Coastal Conservation
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