GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL EXPERIENCES SHARED AS FOURTH BIENNIAL INTERNATIONAL WATERS CONFERENCE DRAWS TO A CLOSE

Environmental Panorama
International
August of 2007

 

03 August 2007 - Media Statement - Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism - FRIDAY, 03 AUGUST 2007: “As individual countries we cannot begin to address the environmental challenges facing us, we need to collaborate, co-operate and invest at a regional and global level,” said Andre Share, marine resource manager from South Africa’s department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism during the closing ceremony of the Global Environment Facility’s Fourth Biennial International Waters Conference."

South Africa was the first country on the continent to host the International Waters Conference. This follows the successful hosting of the Third GEF Assembly in August last year.

GEF is currently funding 27 International Water projects on the African continent.

Reflecting on the content of the programme, Share commented on the session on Celebration of African Achievements which highlighted results of successful cooperation among countries in the Senegal River Basin in West Africa, in groundwater management in the Iullemeden Aquifer, in coastal and marine management in East Africa and with Indian Ocean states, as well as in two GEF funded projects of particular importance to South Africa, the GloBallast programme addressing the introduction of invasive alien species through the ballast water of ships moving through the region, including a demonstration site in the Western Cape.

“Of course I cannot fail to mention the groundbreaking successful Benguela Current Large Marine Ecosystem (BCLME) project, which is of great significance to South Africa as it embodies the spirit of collaboration, knowledge and experience sharing between SA, Namibia and Angola,” said Share.

The BCLME has proven to be so successful that the process to develop a similar project, the Agulhas - Somali Current Large Marine Ecosystem, on the east coast of Africa is now underway. The lessons learnt and best practice emanating from the BCLME will prove to be invaluable in initiating this pivotal project.

SA has already begun to implement the ecosystem approach to fisheries management, fully recognizing the social and economic considerations.

Share highlighted that globally we are already experiencing massive environmental challenges in particular climate variability and change as increased pressure on our water resource systems, which means more frequent and more intense floods and droughts - changes in ocean temperatures, affecting agriculture & fisheries, water supply and sanitation, livelihoods and food security.

Traditionally we have always associated the ocean as being plentiful, with infinite resources but today we fully realize that the situation has changed dramatically and only we have the power to turn the situation around as we ensure that our oceans are protected and sustained for future generations. Today our oceans are oceans of hope as we strive to meet the needs of all and not the greed of some, Share concluded.
Carol Moses

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Minister Marthinus van Schalkwyk Opens Fourth Biennial International Waters Conference in Cape Town

Media Statement 2007 - Media Statement - Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism - TUESDAY, 31 JULY 2007: “The success of International Waters Programmes and projects must lie in the ability of the implementers to work across state boundaries with various configurations of government agencies and portfolios. The value of such gatherings is that they allow the lessons learned across continents to be crystallised into basic universal good practice. We note that the GEF has made efforts to engage in Waters programmes across the globe including the developing world. We in the developing world, although having slightly more pristine habitats and ecosystems, acknowledge that the environment must be managed at the appropriate scales if we are going to have a measure of success that stands the test of time,” said Marthinus van Schalkwyk, Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism during his welcome address at the Global Environmental Facilitys’ (GEF) Fourth Biennial International Waters Conference, which commenced today.

The Fourth Biennial Conference sees over 350 international delegates from 135 countries converge at the Cape Town International Convention Centre from 31 July to 03 August 2007 to discuss projects, share experiences and highlight challenges around the pertinent issue of international waters.

GEF is the main financial mechanism for several global environmental conventions. International waters is one of the GEF focal areas and is a mechanism for catalyzing action by gathering information and conducting analysis of transboundary water concerns. Through its international waters projects it provides support to countries to strengthen transboundary collaboration in addressing key transboundary concerns such as water pollution, protection of fisheries habitats and unsustainable exploitation of fisheries.

The Minister highlighted that South Africa like other countries that are adjacent to large ocean spaces was aware that we should be doing more to understand the impacts of large scale processes on our local habitats, marine industries and communities. He added that large scale and international waters programmes can focus on regional and global issues and will provide a basis to understand risk and vulnerability to large ecosystem shifts, such as climate change impacts.

Van Schalkwyk noted that the understanding of socio-economic impacts in managing ecosystems is an aspect that has been gaining importance. “The traditional uses of the oceans only to harvest marine living resources must further be diversified to include a wider range of activities. In South Africa, marine ecotourism is a growing industry especially with regard to viewing our top marine predators such as sharks, whales, seals and birds,” he said.

Van Schalkwyk emphasised that with each coastal state exercising its right to use the ocean services at its disposal, we needed to acknowledge that there are threshold limits that exist at the ecosystem scale. “The true value of International Waters Programmes, like those facilitated through the GEF, is that they engage management agencies on these large scale limits. These programmes encourage states to look at environmental impacts and influences outside their jurisdictional boundaries and across ecosystem scales,” said van Schalkwyk.

Commenting on the conference agenda he welcomed the revised structure of conference proceedings geared towards interaction and focused interactive dialogue sessions. Van Schalkwyk described the agenda as bold and commendable designed with the intention to maximise opportunities to exchange experiences and lessons from around the world and to move away from the less interactive traditional format of plenary sessions and presentations

“I note with particular interest that you have sessions devoted to issues on ground water, pollution, marine fisheries, which are very close to South Africans in general and to Cape Town in particular, and finally assessing and valuing ecosystems. This is an area where most of us can develop expertise. Such valuations provide a sound basis from which to make our management interventions and facilitate the motivation for resources to undertake such large scale work,” commented van Schalkwyk.
Carol Moses

 
 

Source: South African Environmental (http://www.environment.gov.za)
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