From the most Romantic Sewer in Europe to a Living River - The Rhine Case - Dr. Fritz Holzwarth

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UNW-DPC International Workshop Institutional Capacity Development in Transboundary Basins Lessons learned from practical experiences 10 – 12 November 2008 Bonn, Germany From the most Romantic Sewer in Europe to a Living River - The Rhine Case - Dr. Fritz Holzwarth Deputy Director General German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety

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UNW-DPC International Workshop Institutional Capacity Development in Transboundary Basins Lessons learned from practical experiences 10 – 12 November 2008 Bonn, Germany. From the most Romantic Sewer in Europe to a Living River - The Rhine Case - Dr. Fritz Holzwarth Deputy Director General - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of From the most Romantic Sewer in Europe to a Living River - The Rhine Case - Dr. Fritz Holzwarth

Page 1: From the most Romantic Sewer in Europe to a Living River - The Rhine Case - Dr. Fritz Holzwarth

UNW-DPC International Workshop Institutional Capacity Development in Transboundary Basins

Lessons learned from practical experiences

10 – 12 November 2008Bonn, Germany

From the most Romantic Sewer in Europe to a Living River

- The Rhine Case -

Dr. Fritz HolzwarthDeputy Director General

German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety

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Rhine river basin in Europe

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Characteristics of the river and the basin

• 3rd biggest European river– after Volga and Danube– 1320 km length of the Rhine stream– navigable length: 825 km

• Glacier and snow fed • 9 countries in the catchment

– Italy, Austria, Liechtenstein, Switzerland, France, Germany, Belgium, Luxemburg, Netherlands and EU

• Catchment area: 200.000 km²• 58 million inhabitants• Drinking water for 20 million people

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Countries in the river

basin

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1838

1872

1980

Development of the Rhine hydromorphology

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Situation in the 1970s

• In the midth of the 20th century the chemical and ecological status of the Rhine had deteriorated dramatically– industrial development– increase of agricultural production

• more fertilizers

• 1935 the salmon had disappeared– only 20 fish species left

• Since the 1950s it had been more and more difficult to use the Rhine as drinking water ressource– phenol pollution– too salty

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First steps

• 1948 international salmon conference– too late

• 1950 establishment of the International Commission for the Protection of the Rhine

• 1976 Chemical and chloride conventions– reduction of cadmium, mercury etc.– reduction of salt discharges from the salt mines

• 1970 – 1990 more than 40 billion € invested to build waste water treatment plants

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Water Quality in the 1970s and its

development

at the monitoring stations

Weil (yellow)Coblence (red)

Bimmen/Lobith (violet)

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1986: Fire at Sandoz, Schweizerhalle (CH)

• Fire in a chemical storage facility

• 15.000 l of water for firefighting were discharged in the river– 20 tons of mercury and

pesticides• Nearly all fishes,

especially eels died• Drinking water facilities

were shut down for 18 days

• Ca. 90 million € damages

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Sandoz follow up: First Rhine Action Programme

• 1987 – 2000– new or improved waste water treatment plans

• 95 % connected municipalities and industrial sites, 10% improvement– storage facilities for firefighting water at all industrial sites– secure storage of dangerous substances– warning and alarm system– around 13 billion € invested, mostly for waste water treatment

• Results– considerable improvement of water quality

• 70 – 100 % reduction of the problematic substances– considerable reduction of accidents– recovering of the Rhine fauna

• with 63 species the fish fauna is nearly restored • the salmon as „Rhine Symbol“ is back due to the salmon 2000

initiative

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Fishes in the River Rhine1950 - 2000

1950 1969 2000without

treatmenttreatment and

monitoring

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Current tasks in the Rhine basin• Second Rhine Action programme

– 2000 – 2020– sustainable development of the river

• improvement of ecosystems– e.g. self-sustaining salmon population

• improvement of water quality• groundwater protection• flood prevention

• EC Water Framework Directive– good status of all water bodies in principle until 2015– first international river basin management plan until

December 2009– national programmes of measures– transboundary coordination and cooperation

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Today’s water management issues in the Rhine basin

• To restore free migration – through the rivers and to increase the habitat diversity

along the waters• To reduce diffuse pollution

– in particular from nutrients, plant protective agents, metals, dangerous substances derived from historic pollution

• To further reduce point source pollution– in particular due to industrial and municipal inputs

• To harmonize water uses and environmental objectives– navigation, hydropower, flood protection and others

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Rhine flood action plan

• Targets– reduce damage risks

• 2005: 10%, target: 25% (2020)

– reduce high-water levels• 2005: 30%, target: 70% (2020)

– increase flood awareness• e.g. via flood risk maps, Rhine flood atlas

– improve flood forecasting system

• First evaluation report– it is difficult to achieve the targets– new EC flood directive has to be taken into account

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Rhine Flood Atlas

• Flood risk maps• From Lake Constance

to the North Sea• 34 maps, 1:10.000• Information on

damage risks• Awareness raising

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Thank you for your attention!