H LIFE unites people for Nature
2018
4 p.
At the end of 2011, the European Commission launched the Natura 2000 Biogeographical Process to help Member States achieve favourable conservation status for habitats and species protected under the EU Habitats and Birds Directives. This will enable Member States to fulfil their legal obligations regarding the management of Natura 2000. The Process involves multiple stakeholders cooperating at biogeographical level through seminars, workshops and joint activities. It aims to enhance the effective implementation, management, monitoring, financing and reporting of the Natura 2000 network. Specifically, the Process: - is a voluntary process for fulfilling obligations set out in the EU nature directives - enhances coordinated and collaborative approaches among Member States sharing a common biogeographical context - is strongly dependant on the active involvement of Member States and stakeholders (e.g. NGOs) - sees Natura 2000 as both a network of protected sites and a network of people Key objectives: - collecting up-to-date information on threats and conservation needs for species and habitats - identifying common objectives, priorities and management actions - developing new management insights, cross-border stakeholder cooperation frameworks, and networks of specialists and site managers - promoting Natura 2000 management that integrates socio- economic objectives
Factsheet
LIFE
European Union
978-92-79-98144-9
English
LIFE
https://op.europa.eu/en/publication-detail/-/publication/bfb3c105-29c7-11e9-8d04-01aa75ed71a1