Euronatur


Deutsche Version  
(c) Patrick Lörtscher (c) Patrick Lörtscher
           
  


Photography Competition


2008





 

European Green Belt

"The importance of Europe on a world wide scale becomes more and more important and the unified Europe can be the driving force for the solution of global problems. The European Green Belt will help us to bring people in Europe closer together."

Euronatur-Award winner Mikhail Gorbachev

Since the fall of the Iron Curtain in 1989, there remains a strip of habitat running the entire length of Europe, which remains comparably undisturbed in many places. The latter is true for many larger adjacent areas of high conservational value, which are connected by this habitat strip. It is the aim of the ‘Green Belt’ project to have this entire strip with the key habitats within it become part of an ecological network. The Belt would act as a symbol of union between East and West and as a key element of Europe’s global commitment to halting biodiversity loss by 2010.

European Green Belt "Fact Sheet" (pdf-file, 129 kb)

 


The Pan-European Green Belt exists in three main sections:

1) The Fennoscandian Belt - between Norway, Finland and the Russian Federation;

2) The Central European Belt - running through Germany, between the Czech Republic, Austria and Hungary and extended to the Adriatic Sea;

3) The Balkan Belt - running along the barrier that separated Balkan countries, ending at the Black Sea.

Euronatur-Projects mainly concentrate on the southern part, the Balkans:

IUCN-Strategy for Southeastern Europe (pdf-file, 1130 kb), by Euronatur

For further information see: www.europeangreenbelt.org - the site contains also a newsletter with current information on Green Belt projects and events.


Printable version
E-Mail to a friend
To top

 

 

Green Belt Europe

Balkan Green Belt