MEDCOAST’s Hammamet Declaration (2001)
The Fifth International Conference on the
Mediterranean Coastal Environment, MEDCOAST 01, 23 - 27 October 2001, Hammamet
, Tunisia, was organised in collaboration with two Tunisian institution namely;
the Agency for Coastal Protection and Planning and National Institute of Marine
Science and Technology. The conference was honoured by the presence and address
of the Minister of Environment and Territorial Management in the Opening
Session. One hundred and sixty seven participants of the conference,
representing twenty eight countries, in appreciation of the generous support
provided by the Tunisian Government to the organisation of the conference, and;
- Being
aware of uniqueness of the Mediterranean and the Black Sea coastal
environment, the importance of the coastal areas as the melting pots of
the cultures of the people in the riparian states, and the significant
role of these areas in the economical development of the countries, and
the wealth of the populations;
- Noting
the long-lasting efforts of the Mediterranean countries under the
framework of the UNEP’s Mediterranean Action Plan (MAP) for regional
collaboration with the aim of improving the environmental and ecological
conditions of the Mediterranean and its coastal areas, and the positive
impact of the Rio Conference on the widening of the MAP’s vision and
perspective with the start of the second phase in 1995;
- Supporting
the creation of the Mediterranean Commission on Sustainable Development
(MCSD) as an advisory institution to observe and guide, where possible,
the regional collaboration that impact the sustainable development efforts
in the Mediterranean countries, but being concerned by the significant
overlap of the MCSD with the traditional MAP system;
- Witnessing
with concern the delays in the establishment of an effective mechanism for
collaboration of the Black Sea countries since 1997 in solving the
regional and national coastal and marine issues despite of the favourable
environment created and foundation laid out by the Black Sea Environmental
Program, and being worried for the insufficient co-ordination of various
individual projects initiated thereafter;
- Observing
that the anthropogenic pressure for fast development of coastal and marine
resources, especially in the southern and eastern countries, often result
in un-recoverable, important losses, despite the increased efforts towards
better coastal and marine management in many countries of the
Mediterranean and the Black Sea;
Unanimously agree to bring out the
following observations and recommendations to the attention of the national and
international institutions dealing with coastal and marine issues, as well as
of the public:
- Collaboration
over the Mediterranean and the Black Sea basins should be extended beyond
the intergovernmental programs. Creation and functioning of decentralised
networks aiming co-operative efforts to improve coastal and marine
management practices should be encouraged by the international programs
and donor institutions. In this context, the Mediterranean programs of the
European Union, which created a significant momentum in the region for
decentralised co-operation in the first half of the 1990’s, should
be revitalised, and similar programs for the Black Sea should be initiated.
Instruments should be designed to substantiate the interaction of the
Mediterranean and the Black Sea networks.
- Inter-governmental
co-operation over the Mediterranean and Black Sea basins must be expanded
beyond the level of the environmental ministries, as it is presently
achieved by the MAP system. Intergovernmental collaboration over the
important regional issues, such as tourism development and management,
fisheries, marine transportation of dangerous products and of refugees,
must be effectively institutionalised. Independent Mediterranean and Black
Sea intergovernmental institutions should be created for the collaborative
management of these regional issues. At the same time, all Mediterranean
countries are invited to ratify all protocols that have been already
enacted within the MAP system.
- Tourism,
being the most important economical use of the coastal and marine areas in
the Mediterranean and having a good potential for development in the Black
Sea, and thus providing great development pressures on pristine and
ecologically sensitive sites in particular, and on the environment and
resources in general, needs to be managed more effectively at the regional
scale. Creation of the Mediterranean Tourism Organisation as an intergovernmental institution would
facilitate information and experience sharing among the riparian countries
on one hand, and development of regional policies, guidelines and
agreements for minimising the tourism related impacts on the other. One
such policy could be implementing schemes for tourist contribution at the regional scale and using the money
collected for improvement of the coastal environment and for restoration
of the pressured ecosystems.
- The
pristine coastal and marine sites, that possess important ecological, cultural
and aesthetic values should be protected against development, and should
be left aside for the benefit of the future Mediterranean and Black Sea
communities. The northern countries, by using the available and new
international mechanisms, should provide resources to the southern
countries for management and protection of such sites, in addition to
compensation for the opportunity cost of conservation.
- Development
of tools and techniques for coastal and marine management and generation
of the essential data and information should be promoted. Collaboration of
basin wide scientific institutions through the existing or to be created
networks should be encouraged. Especially, collaboration of the northern
and southern scientific institutions in well designed regional research
and monitoring programs should be supported. The scope of the Short and
Medium Action Plan (SMAP) of the European Union should be widened to cover
such scientific and monitoring projects of regional networks for providing
funding on a competitive basis. Preparation of the Mediterranean
Coastal Atlas is an important
example for such collaborative regional projects
- The
synergy among the programs of the intergovernmental institutions, such as
the UNEP’s MAP and UNESCO’s IOC, and the regional efforts of
decentralised scientific and professional networks should be improved. The
international programs should benefit to the maximum capacity from the
capabilities and efforts that exist at the regional scale. Such
collaborative efforts and task sharing will produce not only higher
quality products, but will be significantly cost effective as well. The
capabilities of MEDCOAST, being the most developed regional network for
research, human capacity development and information sharing in the Mediterranean
and the Black Sea, and of other similar organisations, should be fully
utilised by the intergovernmental programs. The scientific meetings and
training courses, which have been organised by MEDCOAST over a decade,
provide significant opportunities for enhancing the inter-governmental
programs dealing with coastal and marine management. Such events should be
effectively utilised and financially supported by the inter-governmental
institutions.