Title: Management plans for individual sites'
1What difference do international designations
make?
Management plans for individual sites. Keynote
by Peter Bridgewater Secretary General, Ramsar
Convention.
2The Sustainability Diamond
HumanHealth
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Cultural Diversity
Ecological Health
Global Change
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Biological Diversity
3CCD
FCCC
Biosphere Reserves
RAMSAR
CBD
WHC
4IUCN Protected Area categories I. Strict Nature
Reserve/Wilderness Area II. National Park
III. Natural Monument IV. Habitat/Species
Management Area V. Protected Landscape/Seascape
(National Parks in Europe) VI. Managed Resource
Protected Area.
5A protected area is a part of the planet used
for the prime purpose of genetic, species and
land/seascape conservation and management. The
protected area may include cultural components,
appropriate sustainable use and benefit
sharing, and will be managed by the owners
through the most effective means to achieve the
conservation objectives.
6 Natural ? I ? II ? III ?
VI ? IV V ? ? Agro ? R
ural ? Urban Artificial IUCN
Protected Area Categories
7 IUCN MANAGEMENT CATEGORIES FOR
PAS Ia Ib II III IV V VI SR
1 3 2 2 2 2 3 WP 2 1 2 3 3 - 2 S/GP 1 2 1 1
1 2 1 ECOS 2 1 1 - 1 2 1 N/VF - - 2 1 3 1 3 T
OUR - 2 1 1 3 1 3 EDU - - 2 2 2 2 3 ESU - 3
3 - 2 2 1 CV - - - - - 1 2 Key 1 Primary
objective 2 Secondary objective 3 Potentially
applicable objective - not applicable
8(No Transcript)
9- Biosphere Reserves Who benefits?
- Local communities
- Scientists
- Ministers and Government decision-makers
10Ramsar Convention Oldest of the global
environmental conventions covers very wide range
of wetlands from coral reefs to mountains to
vast inland swamps Why the Ramsar Convention?
11147 Contracting Parties 1524 Wetlands of
International Importance - Ramsar sites
Largest global protected area network totaling
129.2 million hectares size from lt1 ha to gt6
million ha
12- Contracting Parties deliver the Conventions
- actions through 3 pillars
- Wise use of all wetlands, with
- Wetlands of International Importance
(protected wetlands) at the heart, and - International cooperation
13World Heritage Convention Managing properties
through the listing process. Both natural and
cultural sites, with also mixed sites Including
cultural landscapes.
14The concept of biocultural landscapes
all landscapes consist of a both a natural and a
cultural dimension. Tress et al. 2001.
we cannot understand and manage the natural
environment unless we understand the human
culture that shaped it. Our management itself
becomes thus an expression of that culture.
15Kakadu
WH IUCN Category II Ramsar (wetland edge)
16- A DIFFERENT APPROACH
- The ecosystem approach of the Convention on
Biological Diversity is a new framework for
integrated management of land, water and
biological resources. This approach has 12
principles.
17THE KEY PRINCIPLES
- Management objectives are a matter ofsocietal
choice - Management should be decentralised to the lowest
level - Management must recognise that change is
inevitable
18- A way forward sustainability and reversibility
- Inevitable change
- Integrated management
- Societal choice
- Decentralised ways of working
- Ecosystem approach
- All relevant sectors and disciplines
- International and national
- Cultural, technological and environmental
19- 73 biosphere reserves and 82 Ramsar sites have
been designated wholly or partly as both Ramsar
sites and Biosphere Reserves, and with 32 sites
have also been declared as UNESCO World Heritage
Sites.
CAMBODIA Tonle Sap BR Ramsar siteBoeng Chmar
and Associated River System and Floodplain
NETHERLANDS Waddensea Area BR Ramsar
siteWaddenzee
CANADA Lac Saint-Pierre BR Ramsar siteLac
Saint-Pierre
20European sites
- Doñana (R, WH, BR, SPA, CoE Diploma)
- Waddensea (R, WH, BR, SPA, transboundary, not
exactly the same size) - Danube delta (R, WH, BR some differences, not
large) - Camargue (R, BR, SPA, twinned with Romanian BR )
- Fertö/Neusiedler Lake (R, WH - transboundary,
cultural landscape)
21- Develop procedures for sharing and harmonising
site mangement planning guidance and experiences,
and ensure that the Ramsar toolkit of Wise Use
Handbooks is made available to Biosphere Reserves
managers and that the MAB guidelines on the
implementation of the ecosystem approach are made
available to Ramsar site managers.
22mechanisms for joint listing exist in many
countries Yet do not appear to always work
effectively because focal points guard role
with one convention lack of engagement from
other government sectors environment ministries
often less established than others.
23Conclusions
- Multiple site designations best when they target
the specificities of the designations - Management objectives can be targeted to the
needs and requirements of the different
designations - A large area with several designations is best
served by one management plan. - All appropriate areas of government, as well as
local communities should be involved in the
planning process, to give effect to the
designation.