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1 Dr. Anne Schulte-Wülwer-Leidig Assistant Manager ICPR International Commission for the Protection of the Rhine Transboundary Cooperation in Water Management – Practical Experience from the Rhine River Basin
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2 Content (1) The Rhine river basin: uses and conflicts (2) The ICPR Members Organization Rules and procedures of cooperation (3) Results (4) Some considerations and lessons learnt
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3 The Rhine River Basin Catchment: 200.000 km² The Rhine = 3rd biggest European river
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4 The Rhine from source to sea Alp RhineHigh Rhine Upper RhineMiddle RhineLower RhineDelta Rhine
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5 The ideal river...... for nature protection … for agriculture … for drainage … for navigation... for local recreation... for economy... for power generation... for drinking water uses Functions of the Rhine
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6 The Rhine river basin 3rd biggest European river catchment 200.000 km² Inhabitants 58 million Drinking water 30 million people Main stream 1230 km
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7 The Rhine river basin Navigable length 825 km Basel - Rotterdam Europe’s busiest shipping lane Important chemical industries along the banks of the Rhine Hydropower plants High Rhine (11) and Upper Rhine (10)
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8 The Rhine river basin - 9 countries Germany ~54% Switzerland ~ 14% France ~ 12% The Netherlands ~17% Italy, Austria, Liechtenstein, Luxemburg, Belgium (about 3%)
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9 Rules of cooperation I De-centralised organization Secretariat National delegations political mandate technical know how funds What makes ICPR work so effective? Plenary assembly Luxembourg
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Organizational Chart of the ICPR
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Regular budget - 1 200 000 Euro/year 75% salaries, 25% operating costs Budget of the ICPR - secretariat 2.5%: EC 12.0%: Switzerland 85.5%: France(32.5%) Germany(32.5%) Netherlands(32.5%) Luxembourg( 2.5%) Implementation: EU directives (special budget) 32% each: France, Germany, Netherlands 1.5% each: Austria, Luxembourg 0.5% each: Belgium/Wallonia, Liechtenstein Repartition key
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Unanimity / consensus Decisions are recommendations Obligation to report about the implementation of measures Political trust, no sanctions Rules of cooperation II What makes ICPR work so effective?
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Basin-wide cooperation requires solidarity Upstream => downstream water quality issues water quantity issues: e.g. flood and drought prevention, hydropower generation sediment and temperature management climate change impacts
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Basin-wide cooperation requires solidarity Downstream => upstream River continuity (free migration for migratory fish species) Shipping lane: down- and upstream continuity
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1950 – 1976 Drafting of conventions 1986 – 2000 Sandoz accident accelerated implementation Two heavy floods (Lower Rhine) Since 2001 Legislation: EU level Water Framework Directive Groundwater Directive Floods Directive ICPR – Milestones: 3 phases
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16 Cooperation with observers Representatives of the public opinion 1.Non-governmental organizations – NGOs (16): Nature conservation Flood protection Drinking water supply Chemical industry Hydropower Navigation 2. Other river basin commissions: Danube, Elbe,… 3. Other intergovernmental organizations (IGOs )
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17 Lessons learnt I Water is a common source not individual property Defintions are imperative: 1. the common interests in a basin 2. the special interests of the different countries 3. common concrete goals for reducing water pollution improving flood mitigation/protection nature-near intact river ecosystems
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18 Lessons learnt II Changing participants‘ perspective is imperative Exchange of know-how and create mutual understanding Allow time: The ICPR needed a lot of time for creating political trust Best solutions are win-win solutions for all partners Cooperation within basins creates mutual understanding and … friendship
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www.iksr.org anne.schultewl@iksr.de For more information…
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