Search Results

Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 results found
  • 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.

  • Montenegro Facts & Figures (140.75 KB)

  • Content pages

    Montenegro

    Montenegro, literally meaning the “black mountain”, is a small upland country. Just over half of its territory lies within the Danube River Basin, the remainder being in the Adriatic Sea catchment. Notable Danube rivers are the Tara, Piva, Lim and Ćehotina and the Ibar. In October 2008, the Convention on Cooperation for the Protection and Sustainable Use of the Danube River came into force in Montenegro.

  • 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

    Danube Delta

    As both the largest remaining natural wetland and second largest river delta in Europe, the Danube Delta is one of the continent's most valuable habitats for wetland wildlife. Pollution and discharge manipulation from upstream has a huge effect on this area of high biodiversity, plus the delta continues to change ecologically itself – the Danube Delta spreads seaward at a rate of 10 to 25 metres every year.

  • Content pages

    Sava Basin

    The Sava is the Danube's largest tributary of the Danube in terms of discharge and the second largest in terms of catchment area. The Sava is shared by Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and Montenegro. The joint management arrangements acted as a pilot for the implementation of the European Union's Water Framework Directive for the Danube and Europe.