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Displaying 131 - 140 of 156 results found
  • Welcome Statement of ICPDR on behalf of International Organisations (Istvan Öri, ICPDR President 2005) (415.79 KB)

    Welcome Statement of ICPDR on behalf of International Organisations (Istvan Öri, ICPDR President 2005)
  • Danube Delta Conference Conclusions (117.25 KB)

    Vision for the conservation and sustainable development of the Danube Delta
  • Content pages

    Danube Delta Conference - February '06

    On 26-28 Feb 2006 an international conference on the Conservation and Sustainable Development of the Danube Delta took place in Odessa, Ukraine, under the aegis of UNESCO and ICPDR. The aim of the conference was to generate a vision for the conservation and sustainable develoment of the Danube Delta.

  • Annex (3.38 MB)

    Photographic documentation of the ITR sampling mission, 2001
  • Final Report (1.72 MB)

    Joint Danube Survey: Investigation of the Tisza River and its tributaries Final Report, May 2002
  • Legal Documents

    Tisza Group, Memorandum of Understanding (2004) (40.08 KB)

    "Strengthening of Tisza River Basin cooperation: Towards the implementation of the Integrated Tisza River Basin Management Plan supporting the sustainable development of the region"
  • Content pages

    Tisza Investigation

    The investigation of the Tisza River was a follow-up project of the Joint Danube Survey 2001 organised by the ICPDR. The objective of the survey was to investigate the water quality along the river and to promote public awareness. The countries participating at the survey include Romania, Slovakia, Hungary, and Serbia and Montenegro.

  • Content pages

    Ukraine

    Three sub-basins of the Danube are partly located in Ukraine - the Tisza, Prut and Siret basins, as well as part of the Danube Delta. Furthermore, 2.7 million people live in the Ukrainian part of the Danube Basin, which is 3.3% of the total Danube Basin District. Ukraine has been a Signatory State to the Danube River Protection Convention since 1994. The Convention was ratified by the Ukrainian Parliament in 2002.

  • Content pages

    Slovenia

    Slovenia covers a territory of 20,273 km² and is home to just over 2 million people. It is a diverse country in terms of its landscape and climate, since it is located at the meeting point of four major European geographical regions: the Alps, the Dinaric Mountains, the Pannonian Basin and the Mediterranean. 81% of the country lies in the Danube Basin, making up 2% of the entire Danube catchment area.

  • Content pages

    Slovakia

    Located in the Carpathian Mountains, the Slovak Republic shares borders with Austria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Ukraine. Water management in Slovakia is determined by its geographic position on the watershed divide between the Black and Baltic Seas. The Danube and its tributaries drain 96% of the country into the Black Sea.