WWF MARKS DANUBE DAY

Environmental Panorama
Vienna - Austria/Budapest - Hungary
June of 2005

 

29/06/2005– Busy shipping traffic is threatening Europe's second longest river, says WWF on Danube Day, an international festival that aims to ensure the protection of the Danube River.

The global conservation organization is calling for an ecological assessment of impacts on the Danube following a European Union plan to turn a major part of the river into a continuous navigable “highway” from the North Sea to the Black Sea.
The EU's Trans-European Networks for Transport (TENs-T) Programme has re-named the river as the Pan-European Transport Corridor VII, a corridor that the EU says is needed to economically improve the transportation of goods and people, especially between former EU Member States with new eastern Member States and new trade markets as far east as China.

“How can anyone justify damaging the river through more uncoordinated and unsustainable navigation projects, knowing the seriousness of the damages that navigation has already caused?” said Mike Baltzer, Director of the WWF Danube-Carpathian Programme.

TENs-T supports future projects aimed at reducing ‘bottlenecks’ in the Danube – locations where navigation is difficult for big ships –- to improve inland navigation.

"In most cases, this means deepening or regulating the river at ecologically valuable places where serious environmental damage could result," added Baltzer.

"We are particularly concerned about about navigation projects that could soon be approved and implemented for some of the Danube’s last free-flowing non-dammed stretches, including the majestic Wachau in Austria and the stretch of river between Vienna and Bratislava."

According to new report coordinated by the Vienna-based International Convention for the Protection of the Danube River (ICPDR) the TENs-T projects could further damage the entire river system.

The report, Danube River Basin Analysis 2004, states that navigation occurs on nearly all parts of the Danube, and that construction and maintenance of the navigation channel, sluices, and harbours have had significant negative effects on the aquatic environment.

It also warns that an alarming 78 per cent, or 2,170km, of the Danube River may already have experienced widespread and permanent changes because of past human uses such as navigation, and that over 85 per cent of the Danube could risk failing to meet the EU’s Water Framework Directive by 2015.

“Before more damage happens, the river must be subject to environmental impact assessment and should meet standards of EU environmental law," said Baltzer. "Otherwise, the damage may be irreversible."

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
Press consultantship (Paul Csagoly)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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