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Displaying 1 - 10 of 37 results found
  • Publications

    Guiding Principles: Sustainable Hydropower Development - GERMAN (5.02 MB)

    Deutsche Version: Leitlinien zum nachhaltigen Ausbau der Wasserkraft im Einzugsgebiet der Donau.
  • Publications

    TNMN Yearbook 2011 - data annex (797.62 KB)

  • Publications

    TNMN Yearbook 2011 (1.65 MB)

  • Joint Statement of Ministers and EC at 3rd EUSDR Annual Conference 2014 (34.58 KB)

  • Address by ICPDR President 2014 to 3rd EUSDR Annual Conference (61.57 KB)

    Deputy Minister Atanas Kostadinov, ICPDR President 2014, addressess the participants of the 3rd EUSDR Annual Conference in Vienna, 26/27 June 2014. Disseminated at the event in print.
  • Legal Documents

    Danube River Protection Convention (132.06 KB)

    Convention on cooperation for the protection and sustainable use of the Danube river. Signed in 1994 in Sofia and in force since 1998.
  • Content pages

    Permanent Secretariat

    The Secretariat of the ICPDR is located at the United Nations Office at Vienna (UNOV). A team of approximately 10 staff members support the work of the ICPDR and its expert & task groups, assist with project development and implementation, and maintains the ICPDR's 'DANUBIS' information system.

  • Content pages

    Contracting Parties

    The ICPDR comprises 15 Contracting Parties who have committed themselves to implement the Danube River Protection Convention.

    The final goals are to co-operate on fundamental water management issues and to take all appropriate legal, administrative and technical measures to maintain and improve the quality of the Danube River and its environment.

  • Content pages

    Accident Prevention

    Accidental pollution in the Danube River Basin can cause widespread damage to the environment, and endanger the health of local people and the state of local economies downstream. This was exemplified by the effects of the Baia Mare cyanide spill in Romania in 2000 or by the Hungarian redsludge accident at Ajka in 2010. The ICPDR is working to prevent accidental pollution and to improve response capability by compiling an inventory of all relevant "Accident Risk Spots".

  • 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.