Protecting and Conserving The Marine Environment
Protecting and Conserving The Marine Environment
Protecting and Conserving The Marine Environment
COMMISSION
(1) The European Commission described these threats in its communication of 2002 entitled ‘Towards a strategy to
protect and conserve the marine environment’, COM(2002) 539.
bordering a given marine area and, at EU level, action to tackle human
activities impacting on the maritime environment has been taken sector by Stakeholder
sector rather than holistically.
participation —
Finally, there is a chronic lack of knowledge on the marine environ-
ment and on the impact and trends of the main uses, and the information a key aspect of the
that we do have is too fragmented. We need to develop a comprehensive marine strategy
knowledge base as a platform for informed policy-making at all levels of
governance. The marine strategy was prepared by
the European Commission between
2002 and 2004, with the help of
Fact 4: The EU is determined to an extensive consultation process
protect Europe’s marine involving:
environment more effectively
• all EU Member States and candi-
The marine environment is by its very nature a transboundary issue and date countries;
so must be managed through cooperation and according to common prin- • key non-EU countries that share
ciples. oceans and seas with the EU;
On the basis of the EU’s sixth environmental action programme 2002–
12, the European Commission has proposed a ‘thematic strategy’ on the • 16 international commissions and
protection and conservation of the marine environment. In practice, the conventions;
aim is to achieve ‘good environmental status’ of marine biodiversity and • 21 key industry and civil society
ecosystems by protecting them, allowing their recovery, and restoring their organisations;
functions and structures.
The marine thematic strategy will build upon all the international, EU () • scientists and academics.
and national policies which affect the marine environment. It will fol- There were two major stakeholder
low an ecosystem-based approach, considering all pressures and impacts conferences to open and close the
and relying on the best available scientific knowledge about ecosystems consultation process, in November
and their dynamics. It will therefore bridge the current knowledge gap 2002 (Køge, Denmark) and Novem-
and result in measures specifically targeted at saving Europe’s seas and ber 2004 (Rotterdam, the Nether-
oceans. lands).
The strategy has identified four regions and eight potential subregions.
A public consultation exercise was
The marine environment will therefore no longer be managed according to
conducted via the Internet from
administrative borders, but at the level of environmentally homogeneous
March to May 2005. The Commis-
regions.
sion received 113 responses. The
Within each region, Member States will be required to develop strat-
results are available at:
egies for the waters under their sovereignty or jurisdiction, in close co-
http://europa.eu.int/comm/
operation with one another, and with the non-EU countries concerned. EU
environment/water/pdf/
Member States already cooperate with non-EU countries under regional
consultation_marine.pdf
conventions, and these can be natural vehicles for cooperation in imple-
menting the EU marine strategy. The preparatory work focused in par-
Marine strategies will be drawn up by the Member States under a legal ticular on:
instrument — a directive — to be adopted by the EU Council of Ministers
• application of the ecosystem-
and the European Parliament. When developing their strategies, the Mem-
based approach to the manage-
ber States will be required to submit key steps to the European Commis-
ment of human activities impact-
sion for approval.
ing the marine environment;
The marine strategy will form the environmental dimension of the future
EU maritime policy. Together they will ensure that Europe benefits from a • monitoring and assessment issues;
dynamic maritime economy which is in harmony with the marine environ-
• the particular challenge of hazard-
ment.
ous substances.
KH-15-04-0011-EN-C
and contamination from sewage, chemicals, agriculture, household pollution
and industrial sources.
Second, the strategy will sustain the future of marine industries by effec-
tively protecting the resource base on which they depend. The key sector of
tourism would strongly benefit from the strategy. It will have a positive impact
on eco-tourism and should allow formerly polluted bathing sites to reopen.
The strategy will also help safeguard productive populations of commercial
fish species, thus safeguarding the industries and populations that depend on
them. Benefits can also be expected for broader coastal development, which
in turn will have a positive impact on other sectors.
Third, there will be new economic opportunities. The strategy should bene-
fit scientific research, notably in the field of biotechnology. The study of marine
species should result in potential applications for medicine, pharmacology,
food production, agrichemicals, industrial innovation, environmental reme-
diation, and cosmetics. It will also expand our basic scientific knowledge.
Finally, the strategy will bring significant benefits and efficiency gains
for marine-related industries. Improved assessment and monitoring systems
should help them plan their future investments efficiently and identify ap-
propriate development sites.
Further reading
• European Commission webpage on the marine strategy:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/environment/water/marine.htm
• Communication of 2002, ‘Towards a strategy to protect and
conserve the marine environment’, COM(2002) 539.
• Communication of 2005, ‘Thematic strategy on the protection
and conservation of the marine environment’, COM(2005) 504.
• Proposal for directive establishing a framework for Community
action in the field of marine environmental policy, COM(2005)
505 final.
• Website of the Maritime Affairs Task Force:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/fisheries/maritime/index_en.htm
• An account of the preparatory analysis phase will be in the sub-
ject of a separate publication to be finalised by the end of 2005.
February 2006
© European Commission 2006. Reproduction is authorised provided the source is acknowledged.
Photos: Digital Vision, Getty Images, PhotoDisc