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The Global Programme of Action
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- Preventing the degradation of the marine
environment from land based activities physical
alteration and destruction of habitats. - Links freshwater, coastal and marine
environments. - Global regional national approach.
- Non-binding agreement, adopted in 1995 by 108
States and the European Commission.
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The Need for the GPA
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80 of all marine pollution comes from land-based
activities!
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Why Focus on Marine and Coastal Areas?
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- The sustainable use of coastal and ocean
resources is linked to public health, food
security, and economic and social benefits,
including cultural values and traditional
livelihoods.
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Why Focus on Marine and Coastal Areas?
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- Nearly half of the global population resides in
coastal areas - 2/3rd of the worlds cities are
- coastal
- Goods and services provided
- by marine coastal ecosystems
- are worth US 13 trillion per annum, which
equals to half of the annual global GDP
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Contribution of Coastal Resources in Global GDP
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The Core of the GPA
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- GPA is a source of conceptual and practical
guidance, - specifies action required at national level, and
advocates regional and international
cooperation, - recommends approaches by source category
- Sewage Heavy Metals Litter
- Nutrients POPs
Sediment mobilisation - Radioactive Oils Physical
alteration - substances (hydrocarbons) destruction of
habitats
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GPA Programmes
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- National Programmes of Action (NPA)
- Strategic Action Plan on Municipal Wastewater
(SAP) - Physical Alterations and Destruction of Habitats
(PADH) - Integrated Coastal Area and River Basin
Management (ICARM) - Innovative Financing
- Overall Focus from Planning to Action
9Implementation through NPAs and the UNEP Regional
Seas Programme 18 Regional Seas, covering 140
countries binding conventions
10Second Intergovernmental Review of the Global
Programme of Action for the Protection of the
Marine Environment from Land-Based Sources of
Pollution Beijing, 16-20 October 2006
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Reporting to IGR-2
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The State of the Coastal Marine Environment
Trends and Processes A global analysis
describing progress in addressing the GPA source
categories, based on a number of regional
workshops, D S P I R using existing global
assessments, like GESAMP, GEO, GIWA, WWDR, GMA,
etc., also regional/national reports and
literature
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Observations
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- scattered data
- no consistent monitoring networks at regional
level - no adequate time series
- many project level initiatives,
- often having diverging objectives and/or
indicators - monitoring as part of a management cyclus
- various scales in space and time, aggregation
levels - - not all data are acknowledged by national
government - Need for harmonisation !
domestic wastewater discharges nutrients
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Information needs MWW ltgt GPA
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- Sewage is a primary source category polluting
coastal waters - as listed in the GPA as identified by most
Regional Seas - Various Regional Seas have protocols addressing
MWW, - and need to report accordingly
- MWW is regarded a dimension of MDG - target 10
on WS, - and is being reported in the JMP on WS
- However
- -Connection treatment are often reported as
national data, not RS - -RS focal point ministries are often not the
same as those for WS - -Difficult to disaggregate nationally reported
data, both for coastal - regions and river basins
- -Alternative technologies often not included
(e.g. ecological sanitation)
14Wastewater in UNEP/Regional Seas
15Addressing Water and Sanitation is not
restricted to taps and toilets
Collection, treatment, re-use and re-allocation
to the environment are important aspects to
consider
16Improved Sanitation Status in 2002 58 coverage,
2.6 bn people without access
Meeting the MDG Drinking Water and Sanitation
Target Mid-term Assessment of
Progress WHO/UNICEF JMP, 2004
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Information needs Sewage-Nutrients
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- - Discharges of untreated sewage are supposed to
affect - Human Health, Biodiversity Ecosystem
functioning, economic - Sectors e.g. fisheries, tourism, in coastal
waters oceans - gt assessments of impacts attributable to
sewage - gt economic valuation of goods services
- Growing awareness of importance of nutrients
(incl. sewage, - agriculture, sediments, dust, natural run off,
atmospheric dep.) - gt regional differentiation in management
approaches - gt no global policy mechanism addressing
nutrients - There are extensive reporting mechanisms on
nutrients (N,P), - Mainly load based data, based on national
emissions per sector, - pathway modeling, and, to a lesser extent
coupled with water - quality models
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Information needs Sewage-Nutrients
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- However
- Such data are of poor quality in many developing
countries - if they at all exist
- Emission reduction scenarios are often
in-country oriented, - sometimes river basin oriented, but often not
taking into - account trans-boundary cumulative effects,
- coastal regions characteristics (100
km, lt50 m) - aggregating at the level of regional seas
- - Example Baltic Sea
- ecologically limiting factors
- - P/N ratios, and Si Fe
- resilience, nutrient scarce systems
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Visit the new UNEP/GPA Coordination Office Website
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www.gpa.unep.org