Search Results

Displaying 1 - 10 of 13 results found
  • Publications

    IC 242 - Wastewater Management in the Danube River Basin (400.7 KB)

    A recommendation paper by the ICPDR, developed for the ongoing revision of the EU Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive (UWWTD).
  • News & Media

    Joint Danube Delta Survey (JDDS) ready to start

    Danube Delta, 26 September 2011. A detailed analysis and assessment of the Danube Delta will be held within the project "Joint environmental monitoring, assessment and exchange of information for integrated management of the Danube delta region" from 26 September until l 7 October 2011.

  • Content pages

    Croatia Facts & Figures (150.25 KB)

  • Maps & Data

    Sava River Basin Overview Map (1.55 MB)

    Sub-river Basin of the Danube River Basin District, January 2006
  • Statement of DG Environment on behalf of International Organisations (Anne Burill) (73.12 KB)

    made by Ms. Anne Burill
  • 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.

  • Content pages

    Croatia

    With a national territory of 87,609 km2, Croatia is at the intersection of the Pannonian Plain, the Balkans and the Adriatic. The country straddles the border of two major catchment areas: the Danube Basin and the Adriatic Sea. Draining over 62% of Croatia’s mainland, the Danube Basin covers the northern and central inland section of the country and is home to 69% of the population. Croatian territory accounts for 4.4% of the entire Danube Basin.

  • Content pages

    Organic Matter

    Organic pollution has been on the rise in the Danube over the last century, as human activities have resulted in increasing loads of wastewater rich in organic matter. The most serious organic pollution problems occur in tributaries that regularly receive untreated or inadequately treated wastewater from industrial plants and municipalities. Thanks to the significant improvement of wastewater infrastructure and services in the Danube countries, the basin-wide organic emissions reduced by 60% since the mid 2000s.