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German Government Pledges Support For Conservation Fund In The Cauca

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  • German Government Pledges Support For Conservation Fund In The Cauca

    GERMAN GOVERNMENT PLEDGES SUPPORT FOR CONSERVATION FUND IN THE CAUCASUS
    WWF Caucasus / Levan Pataraia

    WWF International, Switzerland
    March 9 2006

    The Caucasus region is home to the Caucasus leopard, lynx and brown
    bear.

    The Caucasus region, covering some 50 million hectares, hosts an
    extraordinarily high level of biodiversity.

    09 Mar 2006 Berlin, Germany - German Development Minister Heidemarie
    Wieczorek-Zeul has pledged ~@5 million to support the establishment
    of a transboundary nature conservation fund in the southern Caucasus
    region. Additional aid for the fund from international donors is
    expected to see the amount rise to ~@40.

    "Nature doesn't know borders," the minister said at the start of a
    3-day ministerial conference on nature protection in the Caucasus
    organized by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and
    Development (BMZ), KfW development bank and WWF-Germany. "That's why
    cross-border cooperation is crucial for the national parks in the
    Caucasus to be viable."

    The minister also stressed that the achievements in conservation
    are the results of a continuous dialogue between NGOS, academics and
    concerned governments.

    The conservation fund aims to cover half the operational costs
    for the most important conservation areas in this biodiversity-rich
    region. The governments of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia are expected
    to cover the other half. This makes the fund an integral part of the
    conservation strategy, developed by WWF and KfW, in cooperation with
    experts and government representatives from the region. The effort
    also represents a major contribution to the United Nations Convention
    on Biological Diversity by the states from the southern Caucasus.

    The fund is setting new standards for nature conservation as only the
    interest is to be used for project work, leaving the capital stock
    intact. This will secure permanent financing of park management,
    rangers and research.

    "Our bank has already made positive experiences in the past with the
    establishment of the Borjormi-Kharagauli-National Park in Georgia,
    the first national park in the region," said Ingrid Matthaus-Maier,
    member of the KfW-group Board of Managing Directors.

    "The planned trust fund is an innovative tool to secure the
    sustainability of the bank's investments in conservation."

    According to WWF, the Caucasus region - covering some 50 million
    hectares and home to an extraordinarily high level of biodiversity -
    belongs to the 200 most important ecoregions on this planet. Its most
    prominent species are the Caucasus leopard, lynx and the brown bear.

    "No state can protect the highly threatened Caucasus leopard alone,"
    said WWF-Germany CEO Dr Peter Prokosch. "This is why the launch of
    this regional conservation fund is so important."

    For further information: Ralph Kampwirth, Press Officer WWF-Germany
    Tel: +49-162-29144-73

    http://www.panda.org/news_facts/ newsroom/index.cfm?uNewsID=63080

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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