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Looking back and looking ahead along the Danube in Vienna


Ten years after the Danube River Protection Convention was signed, the Danube’s shores were the site of celebration – and will continue to be a place of action.


Credit: Ministry of Environment, Austria
Catherine Day, ICPDR President; Josef Pröll, Austrian Minister for Environment; and Philip Weller, ICPDR Executive Secretary, cut the cake to celebrate ten years of the Danube River Protection Convention.

What we witnessed in all Danube countries this June 29 was more than a single day, it was an output of a development. It was an expression of an increasingly transboundary feeling of being in the same boat and living along the same river. Festivities all along the river brought people together and raised awareness for the interdependence of what we do in farms and yards, in mountains and flood plains, and how the river’s biodiversity develops.

Linking hearts and nations
Ten years after convention negotiations officially ended, Central Europe is a different place. The EU has grown eastwards; boundaries that separated destinies in the past are less than a line on the map. The Danube, as the most international river worldwide, brought its 80 million inhabitants closer to each other. The river has become a symbol for connecting people, for narrowing disagreements, for bridging gaps. This first Danube Day brought festivities to every country in the Danube River basin. Catherine Day, ICPDR President and Director General for DG Environment of the European Commission, opened the official festivities in Vienna. Although bad weather meant cancellation of activities planned on the water, there was no setback in the mood.
Catherine Day and Josef Pröll, Austrian Minister of Agriculture, Environment and Water Management, highlighted what they called "basin solidarity”, a common feeling among people living in the Danube basin. This feeling has deep roots in Austria. The Danube gave its name to the world-famous Viennese waltz and the river was the backbone of the Habsburg Empire for centuries. Therefore, it’s natural for Austrians to see the Danube as a link between different nations.

Celebrating together
Today the river is a link between independent nations that voluntarily come together closely. To celebrate this, the International Association of Danube Research organised a cycling tour from Vienna to Bratislava with many stops along the way to enjoy the magnificent scenery that connects these two towns.
In Vienna, the Nordbahn Bridge was transformed into a Danube extravaganza; filled with evocative sights, sounds and smells from every country of the basin. Electronic cellist Wolfram Huschke performed his unique music, as guests from Austria and neighbouring countries enjoyed an international buffet, prepared by the embassies of the Danube countries. Although Danube Day did not attract the crowds that the annual Donaufest usually does, the celebration in Vienna was a great mosaic, vivid and colourful. Music, discussions, dancing and fun combined to honour a great river and its peoples.

Much work to be done
The river’s story continues to grow, however, and as some problems are solved, many new ones arise. As ICPDR President Day put it: "A lot has to be done and it will cost very much money.” Unlike the early 1990s, however, more is known today about what needs to be done and more tools exist to help. "Within the member countries there is no question about the EU Water Framework Directive,” said Day. This EU directive highlights an interdisciplinary approach for politicians, scientists and citizens to protect the Danube.
To meet this directive, agriculture must be adapted as well as spatial planning, wastewater treatment and industrial development. Day promised assistance would be given "to countries which have not joined the EU, to fulfil the directive’s standards”. She added, however, "at this stage some 50 to 85 percent of the Danube River basin does not meet what is required by the directive. There is still time until 2015 when the directive’s targets have to be met.”

Dangers lurking along the shore
The EU has voiced "deep concern” for the growing threats in the Danube region. Booming economies in the countries which have just joined the EU and which are preparing to do so may endanger the fragile ecology and can tremendously increase pressure on the environment. One of the most visible threats throughout the river basin is also the one growing most rapidly: traffic. Catherine Day calls climate change, caused to a significant extent by traffic emissions, "the most important issue in our time”. As the climate changes, rivers become more important, she believes.
Through changing patterns of rain and snow, rivers will play a crucial role during floods, which will be more likely in a warmer world. Day said one consequence
is quite clear, "We have to protect what has remained of the rivers’ floodplains.” The EU will also emphasise adaptation and will develop a ‘Flood Action and Prevention Plan’, which will aim to improve information, declaration of areas in danger and detailed plans of management in these areas. Catherine Day’s intention is clear: "We have to move all our activities into a more sustainable direction.”

Michael Lohmeyer