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ANKARA: Restoring And Protecting The Black Sea: Cooperation Is Vital

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  • ANKARA: Restoring And Protecting The Black Sea: Cooperation Is Vital

    RESTORING AND PROTECTING THE BLACK SEA: COOPERATION IS VITAL
    By Colleen Graffy

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    www.aircistanbul.org/eproducts/bsec/bsec.ht ml
    14.09.2007

    Something amazing happened on Wednesday and Thursday of this week
    that might not have caught everyone's attention.

    Twelve countries- Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Georgia,
    Greece, Moldova, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Turkey, and Ukraine -came
    together to explore how they can restore and protect the Black Sea
    and to discuss how environmental protection could boost economic
    development and broader cooperation in this critical region that
    350 million people call home. The meeting, held in Istanbul and
    organized by the Organization for Black Sea Economic Cooperation
    (BSEC) and the United States, brought together government, business,
    and civil society leaders for the first symposium of its kind for BSEC.

    The importance of this gathering should not be
    underestimated. Environmental damage knows no borders and cooperation
    with neighboring countries is vital to environmental protection. The
    United States has observer status to BSEC, but as U.S. Ambassador
    to Turkey Ross Wilson pointed out, "The U.S. is only an observer,
    but not a disinterested one." In my opening remarks I tried to
    explain why. People feel passionately about the environment in the
    United States. We want to share that passion, because we know the
    difference that it can make in people's lives. In my own hometown of
    Santa Barbara, California, there is nothing that will bring people
    together quicker than a perceived threat to the environment. I gave
    examples where man-made environmental degradation in the U.S.

    had turned lakes, rivers and oceans from areas of enjoyment, tourism
    and commerce into polluted problem areas.

    In each of the examples, the problems were resolved by
    community-spirited individuals, talented professionals and dedicated
    members of the government who cared enough about the environment to
    help overcome differences, lack of knowledge, and fiscal challenges
    in order to work together to make a difference.

    This conference has allowed government officials as well as private
    sector and NGO representatives from the BSEC member states along
    with U.S. representatives from the Department of State and the
    National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration to join
    with representatives from the European Union, the UN Development
    Programme and the Black Sea Commission to share best practices. It
    is clear to all that governments play a vital role in enacting
    and implementing sound environmental legislation. But it is also
    clear that environmental protection is not just a government
    function. Businesses and corporations share the responsibility and
    their involvement is essential, as is that of community based and
    non-governmental organizations. Education and teaching young people
    and our communities about the environment was also identified as a key
    to changing behavior and making a difference in the Black Sea region.

    What we have learned in the United States over the past 30-plus years
    is that protecting the environment isn't just good for families
    and good for tourism, it is also good for the economy, it is good
    for jobs, and it makes good sense. The same is true for the BSEC
    region. For Turkey the income from tourism and other Black Sea-related
    industries such as fishing, shipping and the energy sector accounts for
    a significant percent of the economy. But it cannot be done without
    bringing communities, regions, countries and different sectors of
    society together. The countries of the greater Black Sea region share
    riverine and littoral ecosystems that can only be protected through
    cooperative, complementary efforts.

    I hope that this will be the first of many symposiums in which we
    can all work collaboratively, not only in the field of environmental
    protection but also on other topics of mutual interest as well.

    * Colleen P. Graffy is the US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
    for European and Eurasian Affairs.
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