ConnectGREEN - An eco-corridor into the Carpathian Convention

17-12-2019

December 11-13, 2019. Budapest, Hungary. Winter might be a freezing season, but not so enough to freeze the operations of the ConnectGREEN project, funded by Interreg DTP. Thus, between 11 and 13 December, representatives from the project attended and participated to the 10th Carpathian Convention Implementation Committee (CCIC) meeting, held in Budapest and hosted by the Ministry of Agriculture of Hungary.

The event allowed for CCIC representatives, focal points and observers to review the activities during the period of the Hungarian Presidency, as well as to see to the ratification of the Protocols to the Carpathian Convention on the Article 12bis on Climate Change. Among the highlights, Ms Julia Shevchuk, representing the Ukrainian Focal Point to the CC, presented the proposal for the designation of a Ukrainian-Romanian Transboundary Biosphere Reserve in the Maramorosh Ridge, in the Carpathian Mountains.

On the ConnectGREEN project’s side — represented at the event by consortium partners WWF CEE and CEEweb for Biodiversity — Ms Hildegard Meyer, from WWF CEE, portrayed to the CCIC the overall objective of the project on maintaining and improving the ecological connectivity between natural habitats — especially Natura 2000 sites and other protected area categories of transnational relevance for the Carpathian ecoregion. It was thus explained that to achieve this aim the project was focusing on:

  • identifying the gaps in connectivity and eco-corridors in the Carpathians,
  • working on the improvement of the capacities to identify and manage eco-corridors, and
  • identifying and implementing directions, instruments and practices to promote, among spatial planners and decision makers, the value of ecological connectivity — with an emphasis on large carnivore corridors.

Ms Meyer updated the CCIC on the advances of the project’s outputs. These included the ongoing discussions on the Strategy on identification, preservation, and management of ecological corridors in the Carpathian countries — currently being analysed by experts around Europe on its vision and on how to combine all recommendation to reach a comprehensive approach for the region — and on the ConnectGREEN methodology — also currently opened to experts’ inputs on habitat modelling — which will render a map of ecological corridors in the Carpathians and, in more detail, for the pilot areas.

 

Programme co-funded by European Union funds (ERDF, IPA, ENI)