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Eastern and Western, NATO partner and member country specialists
discuss recent accomplishments in the sharing of timely, accurate
data and information to protect the water resources of the Danube
Basin, a strategic region shared by two Western and 11 former
Communist countries. An International Commission, continuing the
work of an ad hoc environmental management programme, is expected
to take over in 1997 and may well adopt the recommendations of this
timely workshop. These recommendations include the establishment of
a central source of water quality data and information on levels of
pollution, government standards and their enforcement, NGO
environmental groups, and other programmes and policies. The
editor, Dr. Irene Lyons Murphy, received support from the United
States Institute of Peace during 1995- a study of the cooperative
management of Danube River resources which began with the end of
the Cold War. It analyzes the development and ratification of the
Danube River Protection Convention and other aspects of joint
pro-environment activities from 1991 to 1996. Its title The Danube:
A River Basin in Transition is to be published in early 1997.
Users, investors in new and/or joint business ventures, national
and international governments, research scientists, the media, NGOs
and the general public will be served on the Internet and through
the distribution of CD-ROM and diskettes.
A source of up-to-date information on current water resources,
their quality and quantity, in every country in the Balkans.
Institutional structures, water management issues and water
monitoring problems are analyzed, with special reference to
international waters, using characteristic case studies, including
the Sava River, Lake Ohrid, The Nestos/Mesta River, the Neretva
River estuary, and coastal waters in Turkey. Contributions written
by experts from France, the UK and the USA demonstrate
state-of-the-art electronic networking and the management of
distributed water databases. The protection of water resources in
the Balkans has become a high profile issue since the collapse of
communism in the area, the break up of former Yugoslavia, and
ethnic tensions in Kosovo. Transboundary river pollution and the
development of international water basins call demand urgent
regional co-operation, which will be facilitated by the
International Network of Water-Environment Centres for the Balkans,
the initiation of which is described in the final conclusions of
the book.
Tensions in parts of the Danube River Basin, the former Yugoslavia,
Bulgaria and elsewhere demonstrate the need for international
agreements which will help stabilize and improve economies,
governments, and environmental management within the countries in
transition and across national borders. An instrument of peace, a
Convention which establishes a Commission to oversee natural
resource protection among all basin countries, is about to be
adopted and implemented. This book covers in detail the readiness
of the countries to participate and the programs funded by
international agencies, and suggests ways to stimulate the slow and
uneven government and investor response to conflicts. It reviews
the approach and successes and failures of current programs funded
by the European Commission, the Global Environment Facility, and US
AID, and suggests ways to improve such assistance for maximum
effect within the countries themselves. The book has equal value to
two sets of audiences: specialists in many disciplines, scientists
and technicians, and their colleagues in public and private sector
policy-making who deal full-time with transboundary natural
resource problems at a practical level in the Danube region or in
regions elsewhere; those concerned about the future economic and
political stability of the east European and CIS countries and
their ability to meet EU environmental and other criteria,
including investors in public and private projects.
International river basins first captured my interest while I
worked on water resource issues in the US Department of the
Interior during the 1970s and '80s. I was especially intrigued with
the way the US resolved long and recurring disputes with Mexico
over the shared use of the Colorado River. The elements of decision
making common to basins throughout the world were present in these
transboundary conflicts and their resolution. In 1985 I began
collaborating with Dr. Eleonora Sabadell, who was then a specialist
in water resources at George Washington University and who is now
with the US National Science Foundation, on analyses of several
international river basin agreements. The work combined her
expertise as a civil engineer and mine as a political scientist and
practicing policy analyst. We wrote articles, participated in panel
sessions, and in 1986 directed an international workshop at IIASA
in Laxenburg, Austria. By no means ready to retire in 1989 I
nevertheless began to think of leaving Interior to spend full time
exploring the challenge, and intrinsic value, of transboundary
river basin agreements. I applied for a Fulbright research grant to
develop for the Danube River Basin one of the most needed tools for
successful management of an international river, a basin-wide
information system. My proposal, for nine-months' study at the
Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, was filed with the Fulbright Program
on September 1, 1989.
Eastern and Western, NATO partner and member country specialists
discuss recent accomplishments in the sharing of timely, accurate
data and information to protect the water resources of the Danube
Basin, a strategic region shared by two Western and 11 former
Communist countries. An International Commission, continuing the
work of an ad hoc environmental management programme, is expected
to take over in 1997 and may well adopt the recommendations of this
timely workshop. These recommendations include the establishment of
a central source of water quality data and information on levels of
pollution, government standards and their enforcement, NGO
environmental groups, and other programmes and policies. The
editor, Dr. Irene Lyons Murphy, received support from the United
States Institute of Peace during 1995- a study of the cooperative
management of Danube River resources which began with the end of
the Cold War. It analyzes the development and ratification of the
Danube River Protection Convention and other aspects of joint
pro-environment activities from 1991 to 1996. Its title The Danube:
A River Basin in Transition is to be published in early 1997.
Users, investors in new and/or joint business ventures, national
and international governments, research scientists, the media, NGOs
and the general public will be served on the Internet and through
the distribution of CD-ROM and diskettes.
A source of up-to-date information on current water resources,
their quality and quantity, in every country in the Balkans.
Institutional structures, water management issues and water
monitoring problems are analyzed, with special reference to
international waters, using characteristic case studies, including
the Sava River, Lake Ohrid, The Nestos/Mesta River, the Neretva
River estuary, and coastal waters in Turkey. Contributions written
by experts from France, the UK and the USA demonstrate
state-of-the-art electronic networking and the management of
distributed water databases. The protection of water resources in
the Balkans has become a high profile issue since the collapse of
communism in the area, the break up of former Yugoslavia, and
ethnic tensions in Kosovo. Transboundary river pollution and the
development of international water basins call demand urgent
regional co-operation, which will be facilitated by the
International Network of Water-Environment Centres for the Balkans,
the initiation of which is described in the final conclusions of
the book.
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