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The Newsletter of the
Socio-Ecological Union
A Center for Coordination
and Information
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Moscow, Russia -- Issue 9(31),
November, 2002
IN THIS ISSUE:
DANUBE BIOSPHERE NATURE RESERVE NEEDS YOUR HELP
DANUBE BIOSPHERE NATURE RESERVE NEEDS YOUR HELP
Dear Friends!
This newsletter is devoted to one endangered territory - the Danube biosphere reserve. To protect
the Danube delta ecosystems several years ago the Danube biosphere reserve was created. It is
located in the Ukrainian part of the Danube delta. On February 2, 1999 it was awarded international
biosphere reserve certificate.
Now this valuable territory is under threat. Ministry of Transport of Ukraine plans to construct a
deep-water navigation canal "The Danube - The Black Sea". The Ministry of Transport of Ukraine
insists on pursuing a variant which passes through an the Bystroye Estuary of the Danube Delta,
which is located within the specially protected area of the Danube Biosphere Reserve. The Danube
Reserve is part of the UNESCO bilateral biosphere reserve "Delta of the Danube". Construction of a
canal according to the mentioned project will cause a degradation of the significant part of the
reserve, killing one of the most valuable natural territories. The reserve is valuable breeding and
feeding ground for birds, many of which are endangered species. 16 of the species inhabiting the
resereve are on European Red list, 70 - on Ukrainian Red List. The reserve is also a Ramsar site,
one of the 200 biodiversity rich wetlands of the world.
Below you will find more details about the reserve itself.
You can also find some photos from the Danube biosphere reserve to see the birds, inhabiting this
wildlife habitiat in the center of Europe, at www.seu.ru/projects/eng/dunay
We ask you to send the letters to the following adresses.
President of Ukraine, Kuchma L. D.,
01220. Kiev, Administration of the President of Ukraine, str.
Bankovaya, 1,
fax +38(044) 291-6161,
Koichiro Matsuura:
UNESCO. 7, place de Fontenoy, 75352 PARIS 07 SP, France;
Phone: 33 1 45 68 10 00;
Fax: 33 1 45 67 16 90;
e-mail: geneva@unesco.org
Tobias Salate: Convention on Wetlands of international importance especially as waterfowl habitat
(Ramsar Convention).
Rue Mauverney 28, 1196 Gland, Switzerland;
Phone: +41-22-9990170; Fax:
+41-22-9990169;
e-mail: ramsar@ramsar.org
POSSIBLE LETTER TEXT
Dear sir!
We became aware that authorities of Ukraine are planning to construct navigation canal "Danube -
Black sea" through the territory of UNESCO Danube biosphere reserve, which is a part of
Ukrainian-Romanian bilateral reserve Delta of Danube". According to the data of the Ukrainian
experts, realization of that project in the reserved zone will result in degradation of a
significant part of territory and entail dramatic consequences. Therefore we join opinion of a
National Academy of sciences of Ukraine as well as a number of scientific and public organizations
and we ask you to apply all possible efforts to prevent realization of this project in the territory
of Danube biosphere Reserve. We hope that the Danube Biosphere Reserve will be conserved.
The great help would be if you could organize any form of action near the Ukrainian Embassy in you
country - for example - publicly pass as many letters of protest, as possible, to the ambassador, or
hold a kind od demonstration or picket near the Embassy. You can also ask questions about the
reserve during the visists of Ukrainian offcicals if you jave such an opportunity. You can ask us to
send larger photos by E-mail.
If you are editor or writer (or know one) of any media, please use this information, and do not
hesitate to contact us fro any additional clarififcations.
Please inform us of any actions taken!
Thanks in advance
Shaparenko Sergey,
President of the Council Environmental Group "Pechenegy"
(13, Zabaikal'ski Lane, Apt. 6, Kharkiv, Ukraine 61105,
pecheneg@ic.kharkov.ua)
Vladimir Boreyko, Kiev ecological and cultural center
(Raduzhnaya str. 31-48, 02218 Kiev, Ukraine, tel\fax + 038 044 433 52 62,
kekz@carrier.kiev.ua; borey@alfacom.net)
MORE ABOUT THE DANUBE BIOSPHERE RESERVE AND THE PROBLEM
Ukraine is planning to
construct a deep-water navigation canal "The Danube - The Black Sea".
The Ministry of Transport of Ukraine insists on pursuing a variant
which passes through an the Bystroye Estuary of the Danube Delta, which is
located within the specially protected area of the Danube Biosphere Reserve.
The Danube Reserve is part of the UNESCO bilateral biosphere reserve "Delta
of the Danube". According to Ukrainian national legislation, law prohibits
such activity in a specially protected area of a biosphere reserve.
Recently, it came to light that the Ministry of Transport of Ukraine is
going to issue a Decree signed by the President to withdraw the Bystroye
Estuary from the Danube Biosphere Reserve.
The Bystroye Estuary is not deep enough for the planned canal;
therefore it is planned to deepen the estuary. Since the Danube transfers on
average 65 millions tons of firm particles per year, the appropriate depth
of the canal should be maintained artificially, by continuous removal of
sediment from the bed of the canal. In addition, it is planned to cover the
banks with concrete. The canal will make the stream stronger and quicker,
resulting in the washing out to sea of the sandbank in front of the estuary.
According to the conclusions of Ukrainian experts, the construction of
the canal through the Bystroye Estuary will result in the following
consequences:
1. The construction and operation of the canal will change the
hydrological balance of the delta - it will enhance the run-off in Bystroe
estuary and make it less for other estuaries - which will lead to harmful
consequences both for natural ecosystems and for town Vilkovo water supply
regime.
2. Canal operation will lead to oil and oil product pollution of the
estuary.
3. The construction works and operation of the canal will cause damage
to the habitat and feeding base of the majority of the fish species dwelling
in this area, including 7 species which are listed in the European Red List
and the 16 listed in Red Book of Ukraine. Also, as the result of feeding
ground damage, the annual freshwater fish catch will go down for 19 tonns,
and marine fish catch - for 80 tonns.
4. The spawning migration of the Danube herring (Alosa pontica
(Eichwald) passes through the Bystroye Estuary. The construction and
operation of the canal will destroy the natural course of breeding of this
fish that will reduce its industrial catch by 90 tons, and will also
threaten its life.
5. The waves caused by ships passing through canal will lead to the
fish, including danube herring, youth death.
6. Deepening of the canal bottom and permanent works to sustain its
condition will lead to death for the youth of valuable trade and rare fish:
Acipenseridae, Gymnocephalus schraetser, Zingel zingel and Z. streber
streber.
7. Construction of embankments on the banks of the Bystroye Estuary
will spoil the spawning conditions of many fish species.
8. The sandbank in front of the Bystroye is the foraging area of many
commercially fished species. The construction and operation of the canal,
and also the subsequent washing away of the sandbank will destroy the
feeding conditions.
9. In the Danube Biosphere Reserve, 257 kinds of birds are present, 9
of them are on European Red List, 42 of them are listed in the Red Book of
Ukraine. It is a habitat for thousands of wetland-dwelling birds. It is
nesting ground for 1000 couples of Phalacrocorax pygamaeus, 3 couples of
Haliaeetus albicilla. During the seasonal accumulation upto 2.500 Pelecanus
onocrotalus and up to 80 Pelecanus crispus are found. Up to 800
Phalacrocorax pygamaeus, up to 900 Rufibrenta ruficollis and up to 35 of
Haliaeetus albicilla are wintering within the Ukrainian part of the Danube
reserve. Withing the direct impact zone of the ship course, mainly sandbank
area, 223 bird species are found, 5 of them from European Red list, 31 from
the Red Book of Ukraine.
The construction and operation of the canal will result in losses to
their mass nesting area; breeding conditions of the birds will be worsened,
and the places of rest, feed and wintering will be lost. Thus, the
construction of the canal through the Bystroye Estuary threatens the very
existence of "The Danube Delta", part of the Ramsar Reserve in Ukraine.
10. The reserve vascular plant community encounters 950 species, 3 of
which are on the European Red List, 16 - in the Red Book of Ukraine. Within
the proposed canal construction area half of the species is growing, there
are almost no immigrant species.
The plaint community of the reserve is significantly different from
plat communties of other deltas of north-west Black Sea coast. It has
majorly water and wetland communities inhabiting up to 80% fo the area.
The construction work impact on the plant community will be two-sided:
the ship waves impact will cause to change in plant communities - many
species, including rare, will vanish. On the other hand, permanent ship
communication will bring invasive species (some of them quarantine) in.
Changes in hidrological regime of Kilian Delta of Danube will lead to
speeded euthrophication of the inner water ponds, disappearance of small
estuaries, general turning of wetlands into meadows. This will also
negatively influence one of the most important ecological functions of the
Danube Delta - biofiltration.
11. The proposed canal will break the core zone of the biosphere
reserve and will result in increased noise pollution in 5 km zone around
canal, and negative influences on the fauna of the reserve.
The reserve territory is a constant or temporary habitat for rare and
endangered insects, amphibia and reptiles, many of which are on European red
list or in the Red book of the Ukraine. The habitation of the majority of
mentioned vulnerable species are intolerant to any similar activity.
The livelihoods in the area near the mouth of the Danube are based
mainly on fishery. The construction of the canal threatens to undermine this
branch of trade, and may destroy the traditional system of management in the
region. Therefore, not only scientific and environmental organizations, but
also local residents and authorities oppose building the canal through
Bystroye.
Construction of the navigation canal "the Danube - the Black Sea"
through Bystroye Estuary will cause degradation of natural communities in
the Danube Delta, as well as destroy traditional forms of nature management,
and can result in the worsening of social and economic conditions in the
region. In other words, realization of this project will violate the
principles of management of biosphere reserves defined by UNESCO in its "The
Man and Biosphere" Program.
And as a result, the building of the canal through the Bystroye Estuary
threatens the very existence of Danube Biosphere Reserve and Ukrainian
Ramsar lands "The Danube Delta".
We do not oppose navigation in the Ukrainian part of the Danube Delta
in principle. The canal should be built. Nevertheless, the construction
works should be carried out in such a manner as to cause a minimal amount of
harm to the unique natural biosphere of the delta. It should be constructed
outside of the biosphere reserve. Alternative variants of conducting of the
canal were developed, however Ukrainian authorities persistently do not
consider them.
Ukrainian scientific and public organizations have been campaigning
against the "cutting" of the Danube reserve since the end of 2001. About 30
appeals have been sent to the President and Prime Minister of Ukraine, about
1000 signatures in defence of the reserve have been collected, and press
conferences and demonstrations have been conducted.
The Vilkov Municipal Council (local authority) also opposes this
variant of the canal, confirmed by its resolution of November 22, 2001.
However, Ukrainian authorities ignore public opinion and the position of the
local authorities.
Therefore, we are extremely apprehensive that the authorities of
Ukraine, violating national legislation and international obligations, will
make the decision to build the canal through Bystroye Estuary. Besides
posing a threat to the Danube Reserve, such a decision can create a
dangerous precedent of altering borders of many other Ukrainian reserves.
We address to you, as representative of the international community, a
request to make all possible efforts to prevent the construction of the
canal "the Danube - the Black sea" through the Danube Biosphere Reserve.
Back to SEU Times home page
This issue was written and complied by
Sviatoslav Zabelin - the SEU Council Co-Chair, svet@seu.ru
Olga Berlova seupress@seu.ru, translation by Alla Kapustina
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