MEPs respond to call to protect Europe's wilderness

Published: 4 February 2009 y., Wednesday

Lapė
Only 1% of Europe is untouched by humans and everything must be done to preserve what is still out there for the future. That's the message in a report by Hungarian Socialist MEP Gyula Hegyi backed by MEPs Tuesday.

The importance of protecting Europe's wilderness in the future against climate change is one of the key aspects stressed by the report. It calls for greater mapping of such areas to enable threats to be detected.
 
It also calls for responsible tourism that will not damage such areas and greater use of the EU's existing “Natura 2000” programme to protect such areas. At present 13% of the forest zone of the 27-member EU is designated as Natura 2000 sites under the existing Birds and Habitats directive.
 
The report also calls for more European funding to protect existing sites and “re-wild” ones that are currently being used by humans or agriculture.
 
Northern Sweden, Finland - large protected areas
 
The largest protected areas in Europe are in the north of Sweden and Finland whilst Slovenia and Bulgaria have the largest share of their country protected.
 
Other protected areas include the shores of the British Isles and the Danish and German coasts. Gyula Hegyi says he initiated the report in the hope that protection of wildlife will be embedded into existing European legislation. “We have moral obligation to ensure future generations can enjoy and benefit from Europe's real wild areas,” he says.
 
“Wilderness” is defined by Mr Hegyi's report as “a natural environment that has not been significantly modified by human activity”.

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

On the establishment of a new Tallinn-based university

Three Tallinn higher educational institutions considering merger more »

Teachers to get raise in September

The Cabinet of Ministers today directed the Ministry for Finance to allocate LVL 2.88 million from the national budget to increase teacher salaries as of Sept. 1. more »

Saudis to replace 2,000 expat teachers this year

The Ministry of Education has decided to terminate the services of 2,000 expatriate teachers at the beginning of the new school year and replace them with Saudi nationals. more »

Ask MyRichUncle to Pay for School

The rising cost of college tuition has many parents wondering how they will pay more »

Britain supports Latvian language training program

A cooperation agreement was signed with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) at the British Embassy in Riga today for a donation of GBP 50,000 to the National Latvian Language Training Program. more »

College Knowledge Via the World Wide Web

Student-oriented Web sites are making the grade. more »

UNICEF report

Latvian youth, according to a report by UNICEF's Innocenti Research Centre in Italy, are increasingly viewing education as a key to a better future. more »

Hugher pensions every year

Estonian Parliament on Dec. 13 passed a state pension insurance bill that foresees indexation of pensions more »

Latvian students on par with Americans in math, science

Eighth-grade students in Latvia's native-language schools performed about as well as American students in a recent study of mathematics and science achievement. more »

The business of education

Training choices and e-learning more »