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ToR IMGIS EG (264.37 KB)
Terms of Reference of the Information Management and Geographical Information System Expert Group (IMGIS EG), IC-102 rev5-final 2021 Heads of all Delegations (HODs)
ICPDR.org: Website Relaunch for Danube Day
Danube Basin, 29 July 2012. The official website of the International Commission for the Protection of the Danube River, www.icpdr.org, was re-launched just in time for the annual celebration of Danube Day on 29 June 2012. Over years, the old website had grown in content and became increasingly difficult to browse. The new design should not only allow the contents to become more accessible through an intuitive navigation, it also complies with state-of-the-art usability rules.
Danube Day 2012: Get active for the Rivers!
Danube Basin, 29 June 2012. Laughing children, tours with wildlife guides, open days at water research facilities: Danube Day is colourful and diverse. On June 29, you can join tens of thousands of people throughout the Danube River Basin to what has become the most successful river festival in the world.
A legacy of strengthened bonds: the Ukrainian Presidency of the ICPDR
Presidency 2012: Austria - strengthening the core
Austria takes over ICPDR Presidency
Vienna, 18 January 2012. In the framework of a ceremony held in Vienna today, Austria took over the presidency of the International Commission for the Protection of the Danube River (ICPDR). The former President, Mykola Melenevskyi of Ukraine, passes his office on to Wolfgang Stalzer of Austria.
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Danube Basin: Facts & Figures (6.56 MB)
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Danube Day 2011 in the Light of the Danube Strategy - Get active for the rivers! (27.73 KB)
Danube Day 2011 in the Light of the Danube Strategy
Danube Basin, 29 June 2011. Danube Day 2011 will be celebrated on the 29th of June and calls on people of the 14 countries to get active in protecting water resources. This year, the annual Danube Day will receive a lot of attention, as it coincides with the adoption of the European Union (EU) Danube Strategy. This set of EU policies and initiatives will affect the lives of more than 100 million Europeans who live in the Danube catchment area and neighbouring regions.