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Esbjerg Governmental Conference
2001
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Trilateral Governmental Conferences
Esbjerg 2001 / Stade 1997/ Leeuwarden 1994 / Esbjerg 1991

The information on this site is subject to a disclaimer.
 

The 
Ninth
Trilateral
Governmental Conference
on the Protection of the
Wadden Sea 

Esbjerg, October 31, 2001

Back to overview / Download PDF files
Ministerial Declaration 
Annex 1
Seal Management Plan
(pdf file)
Annex 2 
Adaptation of Delimitation Wadden Sea Area and Conservation Area
Annex 3 
National, IMO and EU activities to improve safety of shipping
Annex 4 
Map of the Particularly Sensitive Sea Area (PSSA) Wadden Sea
Annex 5 
Statement to the 5th North Sea Conference
Annex 6
Wadden Sea Forum

Esbjerg Wadden Sea Declaration 

PREAMBLE

The Minister of Environment and Energy, Denmark, the Federal Minister for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety, Germany and the State Secretary of Agriculture, Nature Management and Fisheries, The Netherlands, responsible for the protection of the Wadden Sea Area, met at the 9th Trilateral Governmental Conference on the Protection of the Wadden Sea in Esbjerg on 31 October 2001 (Esbjerg II Conference) to reinforce, further develop and enhance their joint cooperation, building upon the Stade Declaration and the Trilateral Wadden Sea Plan adopted at the 1997 Stade Conference. They especially discussed future cooperation including the issues of humankind and the Wadden Sea, local cultural aspects and convening a Wadden Sea Forum.

They,

REAFFIRM the common responsibility for the protection and sustainable development of the Wadden Sea Area as a shared nature area of wide international importance as laid down in the Stade Declaration and the Trilateral Wadden Sea Plan;

REAFFIRM in accordance with §17 of the Stade Declaration that the Wadden Sea Area must be protected and managed on account of the external activities that potentially have an impact on the Targets;

Acknowledge that the Wadden Sea is an area of major importance for the conservation of biodiversity, and that it is an area where people live, work and participate in recreation;

Reaffirm their obligations according to the Convention on Biological Diversity and Agenda 21 regarding the protection of biological diversity and sustainable use of its components and the principle of sustainable development. Sustainable development must take account of the needs and requirements of the community, e.g. coastal protection measures, management of shipping routes, energy supply, agriculture, fisheries, harbors, tourism, infrastructure, industry and internal and external security. Sustainable human activities remain feasible in the future;

REAFFIRM that the safety of the inhabitants of the Wadden Sea region is of utmost importance;

ACKNOWLEDGE the vital importance of shipping safety for the protection the Wadden Sea.

RECALL the UN/ECE Convention on access to information, public participation and access to justice in environmental matters (Aarhus Convention) which provides action for

-    developing public access to information held by the public authorities

-    fostering public participation in decision-making which affects the environment

-    extending the condition of access to justice;

ACKNOWLEDGE the benefits of the participation and contributions of non-governmental organizations and Wadden Sea advisory boards as valuable inputs to the implementation of the Stade Declaration and Wadden Sea Plan, as well as to the preparation of the Esbjerg II Conference, and therefore express the aim and willingness to continue and intensify the cooperation with these institutions on the work to protect the Wadden Sea and ensure sustainable human activities in the Wadden Sea region;

APPRECIATE the efforts made by the Inter-regional Wadden Sea Cooperation to contribute to the work of the Trilateral Wadden Sea Cooperation, in particular, in the field of environmental impact assessment, promotion of the cultural heritage of the local people, and sustainable tourism, and invite the Inter-regional Wadden Sea Cooperation to continue their work as an increasingly important contribution to sustainable development in the Wadden Sea region;

RECOGNIZE the importance of marine science according to Part XIII of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea for, inter alia, protection and preservation of the marine environment and the study of the global environment;

RECALL decision 7/1 of the UN-Commission on Sustainable Development that the understanding of the marine environment is fundamental to sound decision-making.

WELCOME the recommendations of the 10th International Scientific Wadden Sea Symposium, held in 2000, devoted to the “Challenges to the Wadden Sea Area” as a valuable contribution to the further development of policies and management in the framework of the Trilateral Wadden Sea Cooperation;

AGREE, in the exercise of their political responsibilities

PROGRESS IN IMPLEMENTATION OF THE STADE DECLARATION AND THE WADDEN SEA PLAN

1.   To welcome the progress in the implementation of the Stade Declaration and the Trilateral Wadden Sea Plan as documented in the Joint Progress Report.

2.   To carry out the necessary actions aiming at implementing the still outstanding issues from the Stade Declaration and the Wadden Sea Plan.

3.   To recall §11 of the Stade Declaration and to decide to further develop the Wadden Sea Plan on the basis of, inter alia, the Policy Assessment Report, and the highly appreciated contributions of stakeholders, including proposals for sustainable development.

STATE OF THE WADDEN SEA ENVIRONMENT

4.   To acknowledge the 1999 Wadden Sea Quality Status Report (QSR) as a technical report in which the status of the Wadden Sea ecosystem and the implementation of the Targets have been assessed and appreciate the, often voluntary, work done by experts in elaborating the QSR.

5.   To acknowledge the conclusions and recommendations of the Policy Assessment Report, which also entails a list of trilateral reports.

6.   To stress, in light of not yet having reached the Target with regard to eutrophication, that particular emphasis must be given to reducing nitrogen inputs.

7.   To note with satisfaction the reductions achieved in inputs and concentrations of most natural micropollutants, however, that the level of xenobiotics still gives cause for concern, and therefore to continue implementing current policies for the reduction of inputs of these substances.

8.   To note with appreciation that much has been achieved in the past ten years with regard to improving the natural situation in salt marshes by the reduction, or phasing out, of grazing and artificial drainage and the outbanking of summer polders, and to initiate a survey of the present status of salt marshes on the basis of common trilateral criteria.

9.   To acknowledge the efforts that have been made with regard to the policy on the mussel fishery and to stress that the implementation of the Targets on geomorphology, eelgrass beds and mussel beds still deserves attention and, therefore, to evaluate before the end of 2004 the mussel fishery with special attention to stable mussel beds.

10. To base the conservation and management of mussel beds on the protection of sites where stable beds occur and areas with a high potential for the development of stable mussel beds.

11. To recall the decision taken at the 6th Wadden Sea Conference to designate reference areas and, in this respect, to welcome the designation of a reference area without resource exploitation in the Schleswig-Holstein Wadden Sea in 1999 in addition to the Danish zero-use reference area designated in 1982, and the Hamburg zero-use area designated in 1990, and the anticipated designation of a reference area in the Dutch Wadden Sea.

12. To recall the Target of an increased area of dynamic beaches and dunes and to initiate the development of common criteria for classifying dunes, including dynamic dunes, and to report on the status of dunes in the Wadden Sea Area in 2003, as a basis for possible further actions to implement the Target.

13. To acknowledge that initiatives have been taken, e.g. in the Varde Aa and the Eider estuaries, which are anticipated to result in the long term in meeting the Targets for estuaries, and to underline the need for a continued application of the trilateral policy and management for the Wadden Sea estuaries where the Targets have not been met.

14. To underline that the management and protection of the Offshore Zone and Tidal Area be closely tuned.

15. To stress that sand will only be extracted outside the Wadden Sea Area and preferably from beyond the 20 m isobath, but that, in accordance with §7.1.3 of the WSP, exemptions for local coastal protection measures may be granted, provided that such exemptions are in accord with the Best Environmental Practice for coastal protection. It should also be ensured that the extraction of sand does not cause detrimental transboundary effects.

16. To note that shell extraction is only carried out in certain parts of the Dutch Wadden Sea Area at a level which is well below the amount of shells added to the Dutch part of the Wadden Sea Area by natural accretion.

17. To underline the need for sustainable management of the shellfish fishery in order to prevent detrimental effects on bird populations.

18. To underline the need for securing the importance of the Wadden Sea as a spawning and nursery area for fish populations.

19. To stress the need for further development of proper techniques and practices to reduce by-catch in the Offshore Zone and in the Tidal Area as part of future fishery policies.

20. To note with satisfaction the positive development of most bird populations and to continue the implementation of relevant measures as laid down in the trilateral Wadden Sea Plan to safeguard favourable food, roosting and breeding conditions for birds. With regard to moulting seaducks, such as Shellduck and Common Scoter, to acknowledge the need for more detailed information regarding moulting conditions within offshore moulting areas with the aim of taking appropriate measures to achieve a more undisturbed situation for seaducks, if necessary.

21. To express concern that some bird populations using the Wadden Sea (e.g. Brent Goose, Eider Duck, Oystercatcher and Knot) have shown considerable decreases during the last few years, and, therefore, to safeguard favourable food conditions in the future, especially for shellfish-eating birds.

22. To underline that some breeding bird species, such as Kentish Plover and Little Tern, are particularly vulnerable during breeding and, therefore, to undertake efforts to reduce the amount of disturbance at the sites used for these activities.

23. To continue to closely observe the developments with regard to installations in the Wadden Sea and the adjacent North Sea, with the aim of avoiding detrimental impacts on the environment in the Wadden Sea Area from these installations and to intensify the trilateral information process.

24. To acknowledge the potential impacts of wind turbine parks in the North Sea on the Wadden Sea environment and therefore to support a coordinated approach in a North Sea wide framework to the  development of guidelines and principles for the installation of offshore wind energy parks, taking account of, amongst others, the protection of species and habitats and the high density of ships in the area

25. To continue to closely scrutinize existing and envisaged new activities outside the Wadden Sea Area, as these could infringe on the attainment of the Targets, and to recall the Shared Principles (§1.8 WSP) and §13 of the Stade Declaration on external impacts applying to the whole Wadden Sea.

 

MARINE MAMMALS

26. To note with satisfaction the positive development of the seal population and to adopt the amended Seal Management Plan for 2002-2006 as in Annex 1.

27. To recall §10.1.1 of the Wadden Sea Plan in which the aim to protect breeding and rearing areas of the Harbour Porpoise in the Wadden Sea Area and the adjacent areas through appropriate measures was agreed, and to urge the EU to implement adequate fishery regulations for protecting the Harbour Porpoise.

28. To recall, in accordance with the 3rd Meeting of Parties to ASCOBANS, the definition of "unacceptable interactions" between fisheries practices and small cetaceans as being in the short term a total anthropogenic removal above 1.7% of the best available estimate of abundance, and to support the intermediate precautionary objective to reduce by-catches of Harbour Porpoise to less than 1% of the best available population estimate.

29. To welcome the designation of an area for the protection of small cetaceans in the offshore part of the Schleswig-Holstein Wadden Sea National Park, as a valuable contribution to the implementation of the Target concerning the Harbour Porpoise.

30. To welcome the Danish Action Plan to protect the Harbour Porpoise and especially the mitigation measure with the application of acoustic deterrents (pingers) as a first step to reduce incidental by-catch in the gillnet fishery.

31. To further improve gill net fishery practice in order to reduce incidental by-catch of marine mammals and birds.

WORLD HERITAGE SITE NOMINATION

32. To recall the decision of the 1997 Stade Conference to strive for the nomination of the Wadden Sea Area, or parts thereof, as a World Heritage Site, in close cooperation with the local and regional authorities as well as local interest groups and local citizens, taking into account the natural and cultural-historic values of the area (WSP, §1.1.1 and §1.2.1).

33. To welcome the report on "The Nomination of the Wadden Sea Conservation Area as a World Heritage Site", entailing an updated feasibility study of the nomination of the Wadden Sea as a World Heritage Site concluding that

33.1  the Wadden Sea Conservation Area is worthy of inscription as a natural World Heritage Site as it meets all of the UNESCO criteria as a ”Natural Property” representing one of the World’s greatest wetland systems;

33.2   a nomination of the Wadden Sea Conservation Area for inscription in the World Heritage List is feasible under the current conservation and management arrangements;

33.3   the efforts of the people of the Wadden Sea countries to conserve and wisely use the Wadden Sea would be enhanced through the World Heritage Site award and provide benefits and opportunities for the region.

34. To welcome the consultation process which has been initiated in the Wadden Sea Region with the aim to consult the local people on the intended nomination, as requested by the UNESCO Guidelines.

35. To acknowledge the support, as well as, reservations expressed by stakeholders and others.

36. To recognize that the consultation process has not been finalized in the  Wadden Sea Region as a whole and that therefore the consultations will continue with a view to their finalization within one to two years.

 

LANDSCAPE AND CULTURAL HERITAGE

37. To recall that, at the Stade Conference, it was agreed to protect and conserve the cultural-historic and landscape elements of the Wadden Sea area through appropriate planning and management and that an inventory including a map should be made of most cultural-historical and landscape elements of the Wadden Sea Area and relevant adjacent parts with an assessment and recommendations for management (SD §37, WSP §1.1.2 and §1.2.2).

38. To welcome the report “Inventory of the Landscape and Cultural Heritage of the Wadden Sea Region” in the framework of the LANCEWAD Project co-funded by the Interreg IIC North Sea Program in 1999-2001, noting its recommendations for conservation and management of the landscape and cultural heritage and to recommend the publication of the LANCEWAD Project for a wider audience.

39. To acknowledge that the landscape and cultural heritage of the Wadden Sea region is of outstanding value, recognizing though that this heritage is under transformation.

40. To encourage the application of the overall conservation and management strategy, as entailed in the inventory referred to in §38, and taking account of the conclusions and recommendations of the Bad Bederkesa Conference, being

40.1  managed development of the heritage;

40.2  use of the landscape and cultural heritage as an opportunity;

40.3   involvement of stakeholders in the management;

40.4  integration of policy and management of the natural and cultural environment;

40.5  enhancement of the awareness of the landscape and cultural heritage.

41. To support the submission of a follow-up project in the framework of the Interreg IIIB North Sea Program with the aim of further elaborating and extending the common conservation and management of the landscape and cultural heritage.

 

DELIMITATION

42. To welcome, since the Stade Conference in 1997, the extensions of the Danish Wadden Sea Wildlife and Nature Reserve in 1998, the Schleswig-Holstein Wadden Sea National Park in 1999, and the Hamburg Wadden Sea National Park and Lower Saxony Wadden Sea National Park in 2001.

43. To note that parts of the national parks of Schleswig-Holstein and Lower Saxony now exceed the three nautical mile line, which is the boundary of the trilateral cooperation according to Chapter I §7 and the Appendix 1 of the Wadden Sea Plan.

44. To note the modification of the baseline and of minor modifications of the National Park borders in Lower Saxony.

45. To adapt the boundaries of the Wadden Sea Area and the Conservation Area accordingly, as in Annex 2.

 

EU LEGISLATION

Natura 2000

46. To welcome the designation of further Special Protection Areas in accordance with the Birds Directive and the listing of additional habitat sites in accordance with the Habitat Directive since the 1997 Stade Conference, acknowledging though that the selection of Sites of Community Interest according to the Habitat Directive has not yet been concluded.  

47. To instruct the Senior Officials, pursuant to §19 of the 1997 Stade Declaration  in conjunction with §11 of the 1994 Leeuwarden Declaration, upon the conclusion of the process referred to in §46,

47.1 to assess the coherence of the Natura 2000 Wadden Sea designated areas within and adjacent to the Wadden Sea Area taking into account the reaction of the European Commission on listed habitat sites;

47.2  to assess the consequences for delimiting the Wadden Sea Area and Conservation Area.

Water Framework Directive

48. To recall the coming into force of the “Directive 2000/60/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 October 2000 establishing a framework for Community action in the field of water policy" in December 2000. This Directive provides a strong impetus for coordinated water management of both surface water and groundwater for all river basins in the European community including coastal waters extending up to one nautical mile and, in respect of the chemical status, all of the territorial waters.

49. To underline the importance of close cooperation with regard to the Wadden Sea Area when implementing the Water Framework Directive and, because it is foreseen that the Wadden Sea Area will be part of a number of adjacent River Basin Districts for all of which separate River Basin Management Plans have to be developed, to establish an overview of how the trilateral cooperation for the protection of the Wadden Sea can assist with this task, taking into account, inter alia, the identification of synergism and the avoidance of duplicating work.

Environmental Impact Assessment

50. To appreciate that the Inter-regional Wadden Sea Cooperation (IRWC), pursuant to the decisions at the Stade Conference, has continued the information exchange on environmental impact assessments carried out in the Wadden Sea Region and has established an overview of ongoing and finalized environmental impact assessment projects in the Wadden Sea Region via the internet, which will be extended and updated in the coming period to enable a comprehensive overview of all EIA screenings and projects in the Region.

51. To acknowledge that the revised EU Environmental Impact Directive (EEC 97/11) has resulted in a more harmonized approach to projects subject to an environmental impact assessment in the Wadden Sea Region. To recognize also that differences remain between the three countries with regard to the screening and scoping of the stipulations of the Directive. To note that IRWC will therefore evaluate the different assessment practices within existing legislation, including the screening and scoping procedures in order to obtain comparable results.

52. To recall the agreement of the Leeuwarden Conference to exchange information on the application of environmental impact assessments in the Wadden Sea Region in the framework of existing laws, with the aim of spreading information on relevant projects for the Wadden Sea Region.

53. To further invite the IRWC to deliver by the 2005 Conference an evaluation report based on the experiences with the implementation of paragraphs 51 and 52.

 

SHIPPING

Shore Reception Facilities

54. To note the trilateral inventory of the availability and accessibility of shore reception facilities.

55. To recall the adoption of the EU Directive 2000/59/EC regarding port reception facilities on ship-generated waste and cargo residues.

56. To urge the competent authorities to take the necessary measures to comply with the EU Directive 2000/59/EC regarding port reception facilities on ship-generated waste, in particular with regard to implementing the no-special-fee system in all harbors and with regard to cargo residues.

Impacts of Shipping

57. To recall with concern the shipping accident of the MV Pallas (1998) and welcome the initiatives taken to evaluate this accident, investigate the possibilities to improve shipping safety and emergency management and the implementation of the first new measures in these fields.

58. To welcome IMO, EU and national activities to improve the safety of shipping, as documented in Annex 3, such as the accelerated out-phasing of single hull tankers, the further improvement of the port state control and the enhanced control of the classification societies.

59. To emphasize that illegal discharges of both oil and chemicals from ships still cause problems with pollution of the coastal area and that this problem needs continuous attention, and to underline that effective surveillance, including an intensified coordination of aerial surveillance, and strict prosecution are important to further reduce this problem.

60. To establish national land-based monitoring systems for ships based on AIS signals, in accordance with relevant IMO and EU regulations. A full monitoring of the Wadden Sea Area within GMDSS-A1 areas shall be strived for not later than 1 July 2005, and to consider establishing a common monitoring system based on all national AIS monitoring systems for the Wadden Sea and the adjacent coastal sea areas.

61. To welcome the EU initiative on a community vessel traffic monitoring and  information system for marine traffic in the Wadden Sea Area, taking into account the introduction of land-based AIS monitoring systems.

62. To invite the competent authorities of Germany and Denmark to discuss mutual assistance in emergencies, especially with regard to emergency towing of vessels.

 

Particularly Sensitive Sea Area Wadden Sea

63. To welcome the feasibility study on the Particularly Sensitive Sea Area (PSSA) Wadden Sea, compiled by the Marine Research Center, Southampton Institute, UK, in accordance with the agreement at the Stade Conference (SD §25).

64. To note the report by WWF, Germany, also on behalf of the Wadden Sea Team, on the “Protection of the Wadden Sea from ship accidents through the establishment of a ‘PSSA Wadden Sea’” (October 2000), as a valuable input to the feasibility study and to the discussions on the designation of the Wadden Sea as a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area.

65. To conclude that

65.1   the Wadden Sea is considered to qualify for PSSA status according to IMO criteria, with regard to ecological as well as socioeconomic and scientific aspects;

65.2   with regard to shipping safety and the protection of the marine environment in the Wadden Sea and the adjacent area, an extensive protection regime, consisting of both national and international (e.g. IMO, EU) regulations, is in place. Examples are compulsory reporting and routeing systems and MARPOL special areas;

65.3   the designation of a PSSA Wadden Sea will send a strong signal to, and increase the awareness of, the international shipping community regarding the particular sensitivity of the area.

66. To submit a trilateral application to the IMO for the designation of the Wadden Sea as a PSSA, as defined in the map in Annex 4, exclusively on the basis of existing measures in the field of shipping safety, access to harbours and the protection of the marine environment.

 

COMMUNICATION, INFORMATION AND PUBLIC PARTICIPATION

67. To underline that communication, information and public participation are fundamental and integrated elements of the development and implementation of Wadden Sea policies.

68. To appreciate the contribution of the trilateral workshop about public participation in the Wadden Sea region (Nieuweschans, 1999) and the role it played in stimulating the thinking about public participation and communication.

69. To recall §I.15 of the Wadden Sea Plan about active involvement of stakeholders (co-management) and to note with appreciation that co-management has proven effective, especially in the field of fisheries, nature conservation, tourism, and landscape and cultural heritage, and to invite the different sectors to continue their efforts to develop more sustainable approaches and methods in their respective fields.

70. To appreciate the active and effective presence of observers from the non-governmental organizations in the meetings, at which the decisions of the previous conferences are implemented and the future conference is prepared.

71. To welcome

71.1 the discussion in Germany with regard to the amendments of the National Park Laws and the discussions with regard to the preparation of the Esbjerg II Conference;

71.2 the active involvement of the inhabitants and users of the Dutch Wadden Sea Region, with whom a series of consultations have been held, which has influenced the agenda of the Esbjerg II Conference;

71.3 the contribution from the Danish Advisory Board for the Wadden Sea and the public consultation process as part of the Danish regional implementation of the Wadden Sea Plan,

as valuable steps in involving the public in decision making processes.

72. To invite all stakeholders and the general public to participate actively in the discussions on the further implementation of the Wadden Sea Plan and of this Declaration, thereby making full use of their experience and knowledge.

ZONING

73. To welcome the interim report of the Trilateral Zoning Group as a fruitful step in the discussion about zoning as a valuable management instrument and about the possible harmonization. To note that differences in zoning are substantial. To recognize that, for the time being, harmonization will not result in better protection, support and understanding by the users of the Wadden Sea Area.

 

COASTAL PROTECTION AND SEA LEVEL RISE

74. To welcome the Final Report by the trilateral working group on coastal protection and sea level rise, which concludes, amongst others,

74.1  that there will be increasing costs for coastal defence, as well as, effects on the ecosystem under the most realistic scenario of a sea level rise of 25 cm/50 years, under which it is expected that the Wadden Sea system will be able to adapt;

74.2  that adaptation may not be possible above a certain degree of sea level rise (breakpoint) hence leading to considerable impacts on coastal defence and irreversible damage to the Wadden Sea ecosystem.

75. To investigate, therefore

75.1  the feasibility of Best Environmental Practice for coastal protection measures;

75.2      which measures and/or integrated policies could be appropriate to increase the flexibility to cope with sea level rise and climate change;

75.3  at which degree of sea level rise the breakpoint will be reached.

76. To support the continued close cooperation between the coastal defence and nature protection authorities in this matter, including communication with the stakeholders.

 

TRILATERAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT PROGRAM

77. To recall §§21 - 22 of the Stade Declaration in which the implementation and evaluation of the TMAP Common Package were agreed upon.

78. To appreciate the work exercised by the TMAG to implement the common package of TMAP parameters including the associated data management.

79. To note the gaps in the implementation of the TMAP Common Package, in particular with regard to the data handling system.

80. To reiterate their commitment that having trilateral data on the Wadden Sea stands at the core of the trilateral cooperation and, therefore, to finalize the work on the Common Package by implementing the remaining parameters of the TMAP Common Package and establishing an operational data handling system, by the end of 2002, taking into account the wish to optimize that system and to have it evaluated by 2004.

81. To further optimize the TMAP for future requirements, in particular, with regard to the Targets, the Habitat Directive and the Water Framework Directive, and to this end

81.1  to make use of data from existing monitoring programs and to evaluate possibilities of including them into the TMAP without additional costs;

81.2  to prepare proposals for the further development of the TMAP by the next Trilateral Governmental Conference.

SUSTAINABLE TOURISM AND RECREATION

82. To recall that the Stade Conference supported the development and implementation of a sustainable tourism policy for the Wadden Sea region by the Inter-regional Wadden Sea Cooperation (IRWC) together with relevant stakeholders, as well as local and other relevant authorities (SD §36).

83.  To acknowledge that the development of sustainable tourism policy for the Wadden Sea Region in the framework of NetForum has been highly successful and has resulted in the adoption by the IRWC of the Tourism Action Plan at its conference in Dokkum on 20 September 2001.

84. To analyze the Tourism Action Plan with a view to considering how its objectives, strategies measures and projects can be implemented in national and trilateral policies.

85. To invite the IRWC to report on progress with regard to sustainable tourism and recreation for the Wadden Sea Region by the 2005 Conference.

 

INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION

5TH North Sea Conference

86. To submit a common statement, as in Annex 5, to the 5th Conference on the Protection of the North Sea, to be hosted by Norway from 20-21 March 2002.

The Wash – Wadden Sea Cooperation

87.  To recall the "Memorandum of Intent The Wash/North Norfolk Coast" concluded with English Nature at the 1991 Esbjerg Conference.

88. To welcome the efforts of all involved parties to exchange information and experiences between professionals of the Wash and the Wadden Sea area, appreciating further exchanges.

Guinea Bissau – Wadden Sea Cooperation

89. To recognize further that many waterbirds which utilize the Wadden Sea also depend upon the availability of a chain of wetlands between the Northern Palaearctic and Africa during their annual life-cycles, especially the Bijagos Archipelago in Guinea Bissau, from where knowledge about the status of wetlands and waterbirds contributes to our understanding of the concept of flyway conservation, contributes to the protection of internationally important wetlands in Guinea Bissau and highlights the international importance of the Wadden Sea for waterbirds.

90. To recall that, at the Stade Conference, it was decided to continue the collaboration with Guinea Bissau in the context of the Memorandum of Intent by signing a new three-year work program that continues and builds upon the experiences and results of the first work program with the aim of finalizing the training of an ornithological team and to establish an organization for ornithological research, monitoring and public information in Guinea Bissau, in order to continue the work initiated.

91. To appreciate that the work program has been initiated with Wetlands International, as the implementing contracting party in Guinea Bissau, after having been delayed for almost two years owing to the civil war in the country from 1998-99, and will now end in 2002.

92. To acknowledge that, in accordance with the work program, an ornithological team has been trained and a total count of waterbirds was carried out by the local ornithological team in cooperation with Wetlands International and two Danish professional ornithologists in 2001.

93. To continue the collaboration with Guinea-Bissau by finalizing the ongoing work program and by continuing the collaboration in the context of the Memorandum of Intent, e.g. by exchanging information on research and management practices, by providing possibilities for exchange visits and participation  in seminars, symposia and conferences, by providing advice in areas of special experience and by arranging, where appropriate, joint publications.

Other international cooperation

94. To welcome the progress made in drafting an International Brent Goose Management Plan, and to encourage the second meeting of the African-Eurasian Waterbird Agreement (AEWA) to be held in Bonn in 2002 to adopt the final version of the Plan. They will follow the implementation of a sound and effective management plan with specific interest.

95. To acknowledge that there are considerable similarities between the Wadden Sea Area and the wetlands of the humid zones in Benin and to exchange mutual experiences in sustainable development and management of wetlands in the form of a mutual visit.

FUTURE COOPERATION

96. To recall §5 of the Stade Declaration in which competent national authorities are invited to maintain or intensify their cooperative dialogue with all stakeholders involved, in order to promote greater public acceptance of the Wadden Sea Plan.

97. To acknowledge that the Wadden Sea Plan contributes to promoting the idea of nature protection and sustainable use of the Wadden Sea Area, for the long-term benefit of everyone living and working in the area, as expressed in the Shared Vision, being

·      A healthy environment which maintains the diversity of habitats and species, its ecological integrity and resilience as a global responsibility;

·      Sustainable use;

·     Maintenance and enhancement of values of ecological, economic, historic-cultural, social and coastal protection character, providing aspirations and enjoyment for the inhabitants and users;

·     Integrated management of human activities which takes into account the socio-economic and ecological relationship between the Wadden Sea Area and the adjacent areas;

·     An informed, involved and committed community.

98. To recognize the requirements of Article 2(3) of the Habitat Directive stating that measures taken pursuant to this Directive shall take account of economic, social and cultural requirements and regional and local characteristics.

99. To convene, therefore, in accordance with the Terms of Reference in Annex 6, a Trilateral Wadden Sea Forum, as a consultation project, with the participation of the governmental and non-governmental stakeholders, with the task of developing proposals for sustainable development scenarios and strategies for their implementation, respecting the existing protection levels and ensuring economic development and quality of life. This will be done on the basis of the Shared Vision, the Wadden Sea Plan Targets and the Shared Principles, and as a contribution to the further development of the Wadden Sea Plan. The results of the work of the Forum will be presented to the 10th Trilateral Governmental Conference.

100.To invite the IRWC to participate actively in the organization and implementation of this trilateral process in order to gain from the experiences of their NetForum process.

101. To recognize that the inhabitants of the Wadden Sea Area, derive an important part of their identity, way of life and well-being from the nature immediately surrounding them. To investigate, in so far this has not been done yet, whether, and if so, how to allow small-scale traditional uses, if such uses would contribute to the support of nature conservation measures in general and are in accordance with the protection aims.

102.To acknowledge that they have been approached in the past by various parties with proposals for closer forms of cooperation, for example the ideas of an “international park” and a “Wadden Sea Convention”. They ascertain that these and future proposals have been and will be reviewed within existing fora, both with regard to possible advantages, disadvantages and potentials for implementation, and that the results will be reported. 

 

HOST AND YEAR OF NEXT CONFERENCE

103.       To hold the 10th Trilateral Governmental Wadden Sea Conference in 2005 at the invitation of the government of The Netherlands.

104.       To invite The Netherlands to chair the cooperation from 1 January 2002.

 

HOST AND YEAR NEXT SCIENTIFIC WADDEN SEA SYMPOSIUM

105.       To hold the 11th International Scientific Wadden Sea Symposium, which will be hosted by Denmark, in 2004.

 

Signatures

 

For the Government of the Kingdom of Denmark  
Minister of the Environment and Energy,

S. Auken

 

For the Government of the Kingdom of The Netherlands  
State Secretary of Agriculture, Nature Management and Fisheries,

G. H. Faber

For the Government of the Federal Republic of Germany
Parliamentary State Secretary for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety,

 

 

 

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