Green Infrastructure Enhancing Europe's Natural Capital Marco Fritz DG ENV.B.2, Biodiversity

Similar documents
Green Infrastructure Enhancing Europe's Natural Capital

Green Infrastructure Enhancing Europe's Natural Capital

Green Infrastructure Enhancing Europe's Natural Capital The European Commission s Green Infrastructure Strategy

European Commission initiatives for connectivity and landscape scale biodiversity conservation - and their link to Natura 2000

Green Infrastructure. IENE 2012 International Conference

What is green Infrastructure (GI)?

GREEN NETWORK APPLICATIONS IN ESTONIA

Development of green infrastructure in EU regions Nature-based solutions delivering multiple benefits

Alpine Green Infrastructure Joining forces for nature, people and the economy

Urban dimension of future cohesion policy

EU Research and Innovation for Smart and Sustainable Cities

EU nature directives & Natura 2000

How keep.eu can be used? Baiba Liepa, Interact Programme

(NBS): The EU R&I perspective

Nature & Biodiversity

SmartMetropolia Gdansk, 14 November Markku Markkula 1 st Vice-President European Committee of the Regions CoR

Why the workshop, why the cases?

The MAES implementation at European and national scale - guidance and case studies

Making Space for Nature A Leicester Case Study. Dr Helen O Brien Leicester City Council

The urban dimension of cohesion policy

THE BASQUE DECLARATION TRANSFORMATIVE ACTIONS TO CREATE MORE PRODUCTIVE, SUSTAINABLE AND RESILIENT CITIES

Linking Smart Cities to Structural Funds

eco logic A HELPING HAND OR A THORN IN THE FOOT? EUROPEAN AND NATIONAL POLICY FRAMEWORKS TO SUPPORTNATURE-BASED SOLUTIONS McKenna Davis

Urban development and cohesion. A.Mairate, DG Regio

SUSTAINABLE URBAN DEVELOPMENT AND COHESION POLICY EUROPEAN COMMISSION. Urban Policy within the framework of EU Cohesion Policy

The New INTERREG Programme: Opportunities for

Delivering benefits beyond biodiversity conservation

Scottish Natural Heritage. Better places for people and nature

EUROPEAN REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT FUND INTERREG EUROPE. Draft Cooperation Programme Tako Popma, 5 february INTERREG EUROPE PROGRAMME

Regional Context Statement

The Charter of European Planning BARCELONA 2013

SOUTH AFRICA S PREPARATIONS FOR HABITAT III COMMON AFRICAN POSITION FOR HABITAT III. Habitat III Urban Breakfast 5 October 2016

Planning for Staten. Habitat Restoration and Green Infrastructure. Island s North Shore

Resolution XII NOTING also that with the increasingly rapid urbanization, wetlands are being threatened in two principle ways:

A Joined-up Regional Landscape: A Roadmap to connect the parts

Natural Capital City Model - Birmingham

Draft Resolution XII.10

EU Interregional Cooperation

TENDER. Subject of the tender: Field-work on verification of ecological corridors

Integrated Sustainable Urban Development in Cohesion Policy

WWF International Danube-Carpathian Programme is seeking to contract an

UNECE Committee on Housing and Land Management activities on urban development

Integrated urban policies and land management The URBACT Experience Didier Vancutsem

JOINT DECLARATION BETWEEN THE EUROPEAN UNION AND THE REPUBLIC OF INDIA ON A PARTNERSHIP FOR SMART & SUSTAINABLE URBANISATION. New Delhi, 6 Oct 2017

Excellencies, Dear colleagues from other agencies and organizations, Ladies and Gentlemen,

Environmental Hazards and Risk Management

10.0 Open Space and Public Realm

Urban challenges opportunities for cities in Europe. Peter Austin Urban Development dept

Ecosystem Services beyond Flood Mitigation

Design, implementation and cost elements of Green Infrastructure projects

Landscape Strategies for Promotion of Urban Biodiversity Involvement of Ecologists Maryann Harris Past-President Irish Landscape Institute

Cooperative Research in Water Management

Workshop on Area-based Management and Regional Cooperation for the Implementation of Ocean-related Sustainable Development Goals

Aquatic, Terrestrial and Landscape Conservation Design Tools and Products of the North Atlantic LCC

National Association of Conservation Districts. Kris Hoellen Vice President, Sustainable Programs The Conservation Fund September 19, 2013

Strategy and Action Plan for the Protection of Biological and Landscape Diversity of the Republic of Croatia

Landscape Conservation Design April, 2014

Richard Lemon Spatial Project Manager. Biodiversity and Green Infrastructure

South West Nature Map - A Planners Guide

German ecological network legal base, scientific foundation and international context

Green Infrastructure. by Karen Engel, NYS DEC. NYS Department of Environmental Conservation

SUSTAINABILITY PLAN OTTAWA COUNTY PARKS AND RECREATION COMMISSION FALL 2017

Albion Hills Conservation Area Master Plan. Public Information Session

Green Infrastructure. NYS Department of Environmental Conservation

Sectoral workshop on Green infrastructure implementation. Multiple benefits of Green Infrastructure

Fostering metropolitan cooperation for sustainable urban development THE MONTRÉAL DECLARATION ON METROPOLITAN AREAS

Soil in EEA s Multi-annual work programme (MAWP)

Green Infrastructure Case Study Template

Western City District What we heard

The role of Universities: Civic Design and planning futures

PROCEEDINGS OF THE RESILIENT CITIES 2012 CONGRESS. Presentation title: Urban green infrastructure: making visible what is valuable

Nature-based solutions: research and innovation opportunities under Horizon2020 and beyond

Natural Environment White Paper & new partnerships to deliver green infrastructure. Henry Smith, Project and Policy Assistant, TCPA

Green infrastructure: the urban dimension Chantal van Ham EU Programme Officer IUCN - International Union for Conservation of Nature

3-2 Environmental Systems

Elderberry Walk. Developer HAB Housing

Biodiversity and Urban Streets

Sustainable Urban Mobility

Stock-Taking on Integrated Coastal Zone Management (ICZM) in the Black Sea IMPLEMENTATION AUDIT QUESTIONNAIRE 2010

1 Introduction. Chapter. In this chapter:

Figure 1. Proposed Strategic Habitat Conservation Areas for Florida

Smart City Governance URBIS Solutions. David Ludlow, Assoc. Professor European Smart Cities University of the West of England, Bristol

Strategic Environmental Assessment Screening Report. Dublin Port Masterplan Review 2017

DGE 2 EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 20 September 2017 (OR. en) 2016/0287 (COD) PE-CONS 28/17 TELECOM 158 FC 54 CODEC 1008

Public Hearing Contribution of Rural Areas to EYCH June 2018

THE PROTECTION OF CHATHAM COUNTY S NATURAL RESOURCES - THE POLICY SIDE

CHATHAM COUNTY S PATH TO SUSTAINABILITY - THE NATURAL RESOURCES SIDE

Living Cities Workshop Wednesday February 10th, 2016 Parliament House, Canberra

Overview of Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission s (SPC) 2040 Long Range Transportation Plan (LRTP)

Journeys and destinations.managing Mobility in Europe. EU Cohesion Policy

CREATING GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE FOR IRELAND

This page intentionally blank.

The Jigsaw: Legal Instruments for Biodiversity Planning in South Africa

Annex D: Project Logframe Matrix

Natural & Nature-Based Solutions for Risk Reduction & Resilience

Contribution of cooperation to innovation policies

Innovating with Nature to solve societal challenges. H2020 Societal Challenge 5

WWF Danube-Carpathian Programme Romania is seeking to subcontract services related to

Large Landscape Restoration and the National Park System

Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems (SuDs)

Transcription:

Green Infrastructure Enhancing Europe's Natural Capital Marco Fritz DG ENV.B.2, Biodiversity All (c) belong to the authors of the used material.

Target 2 of the EU biodiversity Strategy By 2020, ecosystems and their services are maintained and enhanced by establishing green infrastructure and restoring at least 15% of degraded ecosystems -> Action 6b: The Commission will develop a Green Infrastructure strategy

Why is the Commission acting? Commitments in the EU 2020 Biodiversity Strategy and the Roadmap to resource efficiency to come forward with a strategy on Green Infrastructure (GI). Council and EP mandate to develop a GI strategy, "as contribution to further integrating biodiversity considerations into other EU policies" Communication on "Green Infrastructure (GI) Enhancing Europe's Natural Capital" adopted by College on 6 May 2013 >> policy signal towards decision makers, planners and promoters to invest in GI projects at local, regional, national and cross-boundary level.

Green Infrastructure: What is it? Green Infrastructure: a strategically planned network of natural and semi-natural areas with other environmental features designed and managed to deliver a wide range of ecosystem services (in terrestrial, aquatic, coastal, marine environments). In short, the structure enabling healthy ecosystems to deliver their multiple services to people. On land, GI is present in rural and urban settings, and in protected (such as Natura 2000) and nonprotected areas. Spatial structure delivering nature benefits to people Contribution to Europe 2020 Strategy: promoting smart, sustainable and inclusive growth supporting a shift towards a resource efficient, low-carbon, sustainable economy by investing in our natural capital.

Green Infrastructure: Elements Local or town/city scale Natural and semi-natural ecosystems, such as pastures, woodland, forest (no intensive plantations), ponds, bogs, rivers and floodplains, coastal wetlands, lagoons, beaches, marine habitats Local nature reserves, water protection areas, landscape protection areas, Natura 2000 sites Regional and national scale Extensive agricultural and forest landscapes, large marsh and bog areas, rivers and floodplains, shorelines/coastal zones Regional and National Parks and wilderness zones (includes Natura 2000 sites) EU level Freshwater systems, major river basins, mountain ranges, regional sea basins Ecological Networks with cross-border areas, incl. Natura 2000 network Descriptor Core areas outside protected areas Core areas/protected areas Spatial structure delivering nature benefits to people Restored areas which were before fragmented or degraded natural areas, brownfield land or disused quarries; transitional ecosystems due to land abandonment or regeneration processes High nature value farmland and multi-use forests (such as watershed forests); protection forests (against avalanches, mudslides, stonefall, forest fires), natural buffers such as protection shorelines with barrier beaches and salt marshes Street trees and avenues, city forests/woodlands, high-quality green public spaces and business parks/premises; green roofs and vertical gardens; allotments and orchards; storm ponds and sustainable urban drainage systems; city reserves incl. Natura 2000 Restored ecosystem types Extensive agricultural landscapes, sustainable forest management on regional and national level, functional riparian systems Greenways, green belts, metropolitan park systems Restored Landscape systems covering a substantial part of agricultural/forestry areas and industrialised sites, including cross-border areas Transboundary landscape features on river basin or mountain range level, sustainable coastal and marine management zones related to the respective sea basin Metropolitan areas with substantial share of high quality green areas in Europe, including coherent approaches in cross-border urban zones. Restoration zones Sustainable use zones Green urban and peri-urban areas Hedgerows, stone walls, small woodlands, ponds, wildlife strips, riparian river vegetation, transitional ecosystems between cropland, grassland and forests Eco-ducts, green bridges; animal tunnels (e.g. for amphibians), fish passes, road verges, ecological powerline corridor management Multi-functional, sustainably managed agricultural landscapes, riparian systems De-fragmentated landscapes, improved areas along transport and energy networks, migration corridors, river continuum Supra-regional corridors, substantial share of structure-rich agricultural, forestry or natural landscapes European-wide or transnational defragmentation actions Natural connectivity features Artificial connectivity features

Multiple benefits Usually, high return on green infrastructure investments: Floodplain restoration project along the river Elbe (DE) benefits of shifting dikes, investing in floodplain-adapted agricultural management and constructing fish ladders outweighed costs by a factor of up to four. Recreation, flood protection and carbon benefits, which were not monetised, would increase the value of these calculated benefits even further. Sustainable, no-regret investments. Concept immediately applicable Delivering high-level skilled jobs for planning, innovation, management and monitoring; but also jobs for less skilled people in creation and management. Enhances feeling of responsibility of citizens for the area they live in. Innovation/SME potential of GI with links to standards, certification, labelling in support of GI investments. Opportunities for first movers

GI in urban development Importance of promoting GI solutions in Urban Environment Making space for ecosystems; strengthening the functionality of ecosystems for delivering goods and services, such as provision of clean water and air, water retention, attractive recreational areas Mitigating and adapting to climate change effects, such as lower temperatures in cities in summer, retaining rain water Health-related and social benefits Cost-effective solutions (e.g. air cooling, flood control) Connecting urban, peri-urban, and rural areas Link with integrated sustainable urban development in 2014-2020 Cohesion Policy Build on existing initiatives e.g. on sustainable cities, European Green Capital : known to EC

GI in rural environment Importance of promoting GI solutions into agricultural and forestry management (multiple benefits instead of singlepurpose land management) Making space for ecosystems; strengthening the functionality of ecosystems for delivering goods and services, such as carbon sequestration, water retention, functional landscapes, habitats for wildlife Mitigating and adapting to climate change effects Health-related and social benefits Cost-effective solutions (e.g. disaster protection, flood control) Connecting protected and non-protected areas Links with new ERDF and CAP in 2014-2020 policies (such as integration of GI into new rural development funds) : known to EC

Why is the Commission acting? Commitments in the EU 2020 Biodiversity Strategy and the Roadmap to resource efficiency to come forward with a strategy on Green Infrastructure (GI). Council and EP mandate to develop a GI strategy, "as contribution to further integrating biodiversity considerations into other EU policies" Communication on "Green Infrastructure (GI) Enhancing Europe's Natural Capital" adopted by College on 6 May 2013 >> policy signal towards decision makers, planners and promoters to invest in GI projects at local, regional, national and cross-boundary level.

GI in EU Biodiversity Strategy Action 6b of EU Biodiversity Strategy: The Commission will develop a Green Infrastructure Strategy by 2012 to promote the deployment of green infrastructure in the EU in urban and rural areas,... addressing main drivers of biodiversity loss and aiming to reduce key pressures specific, partly time-bound measures

What is the GI Strategy about? Short description of what Green Infrastructure is Contribution of GI to a number of key policy areas: regional development, climate change, disaster prevention and resilience, agriculture, forestry, urban, water, and biodiversity protection and enhancement Why EU action? Priorities at EU level: Promote the deployment of GI in main policy areas and their funding mechanisms (integrate into implementation + guidance, awareness raising, best practices) Improve knowledge base and promote innovation Better access to finance (including innovative mechanisms) Assess opportunities for TEN-G Progress report on implementation in 2017

GI guidance The Commission will develop technical guidance setting out how Green Infrastructure will be integrated into the implementation of the main policies and their associated funding mechanisms from 2014 to 2020 Already available: Better environmental options for flood risk management Guidance on connectivity Natural water retention measures (link to adaptation) Integration of biodiversity and climate change into SEA and EIA Connecting Smart and Sustainable Growth through Smart Specialisation Smart guide to multi-benefit investments Next upcoming guidance: Agriculture/Climate adaptation

Research And Knowledge Base Assess the need and opportunities in the context of Horizon 2020 Review extent and quality of spatial and technical data available in relation to GI deployment Already available: Current work on Horizon 2020 (Challenge 5 and others) EEA reports on GI and territorial cohesion, fragmentation and upcoming on how to map multi-purpose GI Information available in Data Centres and CHMs (BISE, WISE ) Current working programs/management plans in relevant institutions Upcoming: Working meetings with relevant DGs, e.g. JRC, RTD, ESTAT, EEA and ETCs

GI promotion and best practice sharing Promote GI approaches in communication to citizens Developing dedicated IT platform Already available: Information material on website Facebook application, video, illustrations GI is de facto part of the Green Capital award BISE with GI platform currently being updated Natura 2000 Newsletter 07/13 http://ec.europa.eu/environment/ nature/info/pubs/natura2000nl_e n.htm Upcoming: Brochure for wider public Better integration into on-going communication measures and IT facilities, also from other DGs Possibly: Working Group on Implementation of GI

Technical standards Assess the contribution technical standards could make to "growing the market" of GI products Already available: Currently screening of available standards within ISO, EMAS, COST, with ICLEI Upcoming: Working meetings with relevant DGs, e.g. ENTR, MARKT, JRC

Improve access to finance Exploring opportunities for setting up innovative financing mechanisms to support GI Already available: Current work on innovative financing mechanisms with ECFIN and EIB Upcoming: Work towards establishment of innovative financing facility with EIB by 2014

TEN-G Assess opportunities for developing an EU TEN-G initiatives Already available: Analysing projects which could serve as examples of trans-european GI Upcoming: Study to assess the opportunities for TEN-G, including assessment of costs and economic, social and environmental benefits by 2015

Technical information Explanations on components of GI Range of GI benefits Cost-efficiency EU-level policies and instruments Scales and roles on different levels Examples of GI in all MS Further material Communication tools on GI GI-related guidance Background studies and EEA reports on GI Information depository

Institutional follow-up Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions Council: LT PRES plans to discuss GI as lunch item at October ENV council EP Oral question with resolution in Plenary (October - December) CoR: Adoption of Opinion in October. Joint conference with EESC in November. EESC: Adoption of Opinion in October. Joint conference with CoR in November.

EU Financing possibilities + Non-EU funding (governments, EIB, private banks, developers and civil society) Structural Funds (the European Regional Development Fund and European Social Fund) Cohesion Fund GRABS Green and blue space adaptation for urban areas and eco towns SURF Green Infrastructure: Sustainable Investments for the Benefit of Both People and Nature CAP Funding HD Art. 10 programs, High Nature Value Farmland after reform: ecological focus areas, landscape structures LIFE+ Brochure with 65 project examples from 17 MS

Role of Member States and civil society Authorities, businesses and civil society need to take actions on all relevant levels local, regional, national and cross-border to deploy Green Infrastructure in urban, peri-urban and rural areas MS and sector-based policies should integrate Green Infrastructure solutions into their programming and financing work (including partnership agreements and operational programs), and invest in capacity building for guaranteeing an integrated approach Added European value ensured through cross-border, interregional and transnational cooperation through regional macro-strategies and through a better use of territorial cooperation and of exchanges of information, experience and good practices Step up MS, regional and local policy tools and funding instruments for GI complementing the EU action framework Strategically integrate GI into spatial planning processes

Actions on all levels Figure and text adapted from the Recommendations of the GI Working Group on http://ec.europa.eu/environmen t/nature/ecosystems/index_en.h tm

More information: http://ec.europa.eu/environment/nature/ecosystems/index_en.htm ENV-BIODIVERSITY@ec.europa.eu