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62 Danube NGOs Get $636,000 to Reduce Danube Pollution
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VIENNA, 9 March 2006 - A total of 62 NGOs were awarded over 636,000 USD today to reduce nutrient and toxic pollution to Danube waters. The NGO projects were launched in 11 Danube River Basin countries -- Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Moldova, Romania, Serbia and Montenegro, Slovakia, Slovenia and Ukraine. Five multi-country projects will include building bridges between stakeholders near the Hernad River in Hungary and the Sebes-Koros rivers in Romania. Public participation will be increased in managing the Sava River Basin. Best agricultural practices will be promoted to reduce pollution from farming in Lower Danube countries. And the advantages of re-usable diapers and environmentally-friendly detergents will be communicated in Slovenia and Croatia. At the national level, 57
projects are supported. Examples include: reducing pollution from Danube
tributaries such as the Sava, Drina, Ipoly, Prut, Zitova and Maramures rivers;
campaigning for and promoting organic agriculture in Vukovar, Croatia, the
Morava River Basin in the Czech Republic, Subotica, Serbia and Montenegro, and
Moldova; promoting best agricultural
practices to eliminate nutrients and toxics in Serbia and Montenegro, Hungary
and Croatia; promoting environmentally-friendly detergents in the Czech
Republic and Slovenia; and implementing new wastewater cleaning systems for
households and farms in Slovenia. "The work that these NGOs will do in raising awareness
about water pollution is crucial for us," said Kari Eik of the UNDP-GEF Danube Regional
Project (DRP), responsible for awarding
the grants. "The people of the Danube have a right to be
informed about the quality of their water. Their countries have agreed to clean
these waters by 2015 to meet international policy." This second round of DRP grants builds on the DRP's first round of 65 grants which started in 2004. "Key successes from the first round included the protection of Slovakian wetlands, improved trans-boundary water protection between Moldova and Ukraine, and raising awareness among 200,000 residents in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina," said Entela Pinguli, grants manager with the The Regional Environmental Center for Central and Eastern Europe (REC).
Notes to Editors: What is
the Danube Regional Project? The overall goal of the Danube Regional Project (DRP) is to
improve the environment of the Danube River Basin, protect its waters and sustainably
manage its natural resources for the benefit of nature and people. The DRP
helps 13 Danube countries implement the Danube River Protection Convention
primarily through reducing nutrient and toxic pollution and strengthening
trans-boundary cooperation in the most international river basin in the world.
Through its partnerships with governments, industry, NGOs and local
communities, the DRP provides both technical and financial support. It also
ensures, through sophisticated public participation and communications
activities, that all Danube stakeholders are aware of relevant issues and can
put their concerns into action. Who manages these grants? This granting programme is managed by The Regional Environmental Center for Central and Eastern Europe (REC) through its head office in Hungary, in cooperation with its offices in 10 countries listed above. The autonomous REC Moldova coordinates and implements the grant programme for Moldovan NGOs.
For more information: UNDP-GEF Danube Regional Project: Contact Paul Csagoly, paul.csagoly@unvienna.org, (tel) +43 1 26060 4722, (mob) +43 664 561 2192, www.undp-drp.org The
Regional Environmental Center for Central and Eastern Europe: Entela Pinguli, Epinguli@rec.org, Tel: +36 26 504 065, Fax:
+36 26 311 294, www.rec.org More info and background materials: http://www.rec.org/REC/Programs/NGO_Support/Grants/RegionalDanubeGrants/ |
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