European Centre for Nature Conservation explained

ECNC - European Centre for Nature Conservation
Type:Foundation (nonprofit)
Foundation:October 1993. Ceased operations 2017
Industry:Conservation
Sustainable use

The European Centre for Nature Conservation (ECNC) was a Dutch non-profit foundation which was active in the field of European nature and biodiversity policy between 1993 and 2017. It was set up as a network of university departments, expert centres and government agencies and operated as a European biodiversity expertise centre. The organization promoted sustainable management of natural resources and biodiversity, and aimed to stimulate interaction between science, society and policy.

Main areas of work were ecological networks, biodiversity assessment and monitoring, and stakeholder involvement. ECNC worked with and for the Council of Europe, UNEP and the European Environment Agency.

Establishment and mission

The European Centre for Nature Conservation was officially launched in 1993 by the then State Secretary for Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality of the Netherlands, J. Dzsingisz Gabor, at the conference ‘Conserving Europe’s Natural Heritage – towards a European Ecological Network’ in Maastricht.[1] ECNC aimed to promote an integrated approach to management of natural resources and biodiversity, and stimulated interaction between science, society and policy.[2] It was set up as a network of university departments, expert centres and government agencies.

ECNC projects focussed on:

ECNC developed projects throughout Europe, with a focus on Central and Eastern Europe. It worked for, or in partnership with, a number of intergovernmental and international organisations, including the Council of Europe, UNEP, European Commission, European Environment Agency, and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.[3] ECNC ceased operations in October 2017.[4]

Key projects and partnerships

ECNC led the drafting group of the Pan-European Biological and Landscape Diversity Strategy (PEBLDS). The PEBLDS (1994) was the European response to support the implementation of the Convention on Biological Diversity; it was developed by the Council of Europe and the UNEP Regional office for Europe.[5] ECNC remained involved with the implementation of the PEBLDS, in particular the establishment of the Pan-European Ecological Network (PEEN) which was one of its prime objectives.[6] ECNC managed the joint secretariat of the PEEN Expert Committee together with the Council of Europe and coordinated the process of developing the indicative maps of the Pan-European Ecological Networks in various parts of Europe.[7] In later years, the emphasis of ECNC's work switched towards the wider area of green infrastructure.

ECNC was a consortium member of the European Environment Agency's Topic Centre on Biodiversity, especially contributing to biodiversity assessment and reporting.[8] The organisation also participated in the EU Coordination Group on Biodiversity and Nature and worked for the European Commission's DG Environment to support the Natura 2000 process.[9] [10]

In cooperation with the Council of Europe and IUCN, ECNC developed capacity building programmes on stakeholder involvement and communication in support of nature conservation.[11] The organisation worked with international financial institutions such as the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development to integrate considerations for the sustainable management of biodiversity in their decision making.

Organisation

ECNC was a non-profit foundation under Dutch law. Its organisational structure consisted of:

The secretariat was located in Tilburg, the Netherlands. The organization at different points in time had regional offices in Budapest, Hungary and Kleve, Germany.

As of 2009, ECNC worked with a number of other organizations under the name ‘ECNC Group’. The members of the ECNC Group were ECNC, the Coastal & Marine Union (EUCC) and Centro Mediterráneo EUCC. The Large Herbivore Foundation joined the ECNC Group in July 2010. EuroNatur, the NatureBureau and EECONET Action Fund were observers. The ECNC Group consisted of two units: 'Biodiversity and Nature' (ECNC) and 'Coastal and Marine' (EUCC).

Publications (selection)

External links

Notes and References

  1. Conserving Europe’s Natural Heritage: Towards a European Ecological Network, G. Bennett, ed. 1994
  2. Web site: SCHMIT. HANS. 1994-07-15. Europees natuurcentrum wil denk-tank voor 'Brussel' zijn 'Wij kunnen nagaan waar welke kennis beschikbaar is' (European nature centre wants to be Brussels' thinktank). 2021-03-25. Trouw. nl-NL.
  3. Book: Working towards a sustainable future: EBRD Sustainability Report 2005. European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. 2006. 36.
  4. Web site: GraydonGo. Nederland. Bedrijfsinformatie van Stichting Europees Centrum voor Natuurbescherming (Ecnc). 2021-04-04. graydongo.nl. nl.
  5. Web site: Pan-European Biological and Landscape Diversity Strategy. Council of Europe.
  6. Background document for the fifth Ministerial Conference 'Environment for Europe', Statement on the Pan-European Ecological Network, submitted by the Council of Europe, the European Centre for Nature Conservation and the United Nations Environmental Programme, Kiev, Ukraine, 21–23 May 2003
  7. Book: Bouwma, Irene. Indicative map of the Pan-European Ecological Network in Central and Eastern Europe. ECNC and Wageningen University. 2002. 90-76762-13-9.
  8. European Topic Center on Biological Diversity (ETC-BD) Ecologic Institute: Science and Policy for a Sustainable World. 2021-03-23. www.ecologic.eu. January 2014 . en . Holger Gerdes . Mckenna Davis .
  9. Web site: ECNC–European Centre for Nature Conservation – ECNC (the Netherlands) Openness Project. 2021-03-23. www.openness-project.eu.
  10. Web site: New contract to support the Natura 2000 Biogeographical Process launched by ECNC and partners - European Commission. 2021-03-23. ec.europa.eu.
  11. Web site: Pan-European environmental co-operation: the Council of Europe’s role after the Kyiv Ministerial Conference and the Johannesburg Summit . 2024-02-22 . assembly.coe.int.